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ecpg_config.h
(1.02 KB)
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ecpg_config_x86_64.h
(714 B)
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ecpg_informix.h
(2.69 KB)
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ecpgerrno.h
(2.48 KB)
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ecpglib.h
(2.54 KB)
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ecpgtype.h
(2.56 KB)
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libpq
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libpq-events.h
(2.16 KB)
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libpq-fe.h
(20.17 KB)
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pg_config.h
(1.01 KB)
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pg_config_manual.h
(9.36 KB)
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pg_config_os.h
(1.03 KB)
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pg_config_x86_64.h
(26.42 KB)
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pgsql
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pgtypes_date.h
(766 B)
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pgtypes_error.h
(530 B)
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pgtypes_interval.h
(1.12 KB)
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pgtypes_numeric.h
(2.17 KB)
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pgtypes_timestamp.h
(1010 B)
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postgres_ext.h
(1.74 KB)
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sql3types.h
(834 B)
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sqlca.h
(1.25 KB)
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sqlda-compat.h
(1.55 KB)
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sqlda-native.h
(820 B)
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sqlda.h
(315 B)
Editing: pg_config_os.h
/* src/include/port/linux.h */ /* * As of July 2007, all known versions of the Linux kernel will sometimes * return EIDRM for a shmctl() operation when EINVAL is correct (it happens * when the low-order 15 bits of the supplied shm ID match the slot number * assigned to a newer shmem segment). We deal with this by assuming that * EIDRM means EINVAL in PGSharedMemoryIsInUse(). This is reasonably safe * since in fact Linux has no excuse for ever returning EIDRM; it doesn't * track removed segments in a way that would allow distinguishing them from * private ones. But someday that code might get upgraded, and we'd have * to have a kernel version test here. */ #define HAVE_LINUX_EIDRM_BUG /* * Set the default wal_sync_method to fdatasync. With recent Linux versions, * xlogdefs.h's normal rules will prefer open_datasync, which (a) doesn't * perform better and (b) causes outright failures on ext4 data=journal * filesystems, because those don't support O_DIRECT. */ #define PLATFORM_DEFAULT_SYNC_METHOD SYNC_METHOD_FDATASYNC
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