George Wilk wrote:
> As a general rule, the internal data storage format is subject to change
> between major releases of PostgreSQL (where the number after the first dot
> changes). This does not apply to different minor releases under the same
> major release (where the number after the second dot changes); these always
> have compatible storage formats. For example, releases 7.2.1, 7.3.2, and 7.4
> are not compatible, whereas 7.2.1 and 7.2.2 are.
>
> I thought that the major release was the first number in the versioning
> schema, the second represented minor release, and the third would be the
> maintenance release or revision number (i.e. 8.2.4).
It needs no clarification -- what it says is right and what you thought
is wrong. We don't have a concept of "maintenance release" -- we only
have major (new features) and minor (bug fixes). (This is
Postgres-specific). Peter wasn't flaming at all.
--
Alvaro Herrera http://www.advogato.org/person/alvherre
Jason Tesser: You might not have understood me or I am not understanding you.
Paul Thomas: It feels like we're 2 people divided by a common language...