Some quick grepping gave me this table,
YYLAST YYNTOKENS YYNNTS YYNRULES YYNSTATES YYMAXUTOK
REL9_1_STABLE 69680 429 546 2218 4179 666
REL9_2_STABLE 73834 432 546 2261 4301 669
REL9_3_STABLE 77969 437 558 2322 4471 674
REL9_4_STABLE 79419 442 576 2369 4591 679
REL9_5_STABLE 92495 456 612 2490 4946 693
REL9_6_STABLE 92660 459 618 2515 5006 696
REL_10_STABLE 99601 472 653 2663 5323 709
REL_11_STABLE 102007 480 668 2728 5477 717
REL_12_STABLE 103948 482 667 2724 5488 719
REL_13_STABLE 104224 492 673 2760 5558 729
REL_14_STABLE 108111 503 676 3159 5980 740
REL_15_STABLE 111091 506 688 3206 6090 743
REL_16_STABLE 115435 519 706 3283 6221 756
master 117115 521 707 3300 6255 758
master+v26 121817 537 738 3415 6470 774
and the attached chart. (v26 is with all patches applied, including the
JSON_TABLE one whose grammar has not yet been fully tweaked.)
So, while the jump from v26 is not a trivial one, it seems within
reasonable bounds. For example, the jump between 13 and 14 looks worse.
(I do wonder what happened there.)
--
Álvaro Herrera 48°01'N 7°57'E — https://www.EnterpriseDB.com/
"Cada quien es cada cual y baja las escaleras como quiere" (JMSerrat)