These modules were all missing essential Windows scaffolding, including
resources files and descriptions, and links to the relevant library
import files. This latter item means that the modules can't be built
with pgxs on Windows, as we don't install the import files. If we ever
decide to install them this restriction could probably be removed.
Also, as with plperl we need to make sure that perl's CORE directory is
last on the include list, as on Windows it appears to contain some
headers with names that clash with names of some headers we include.
Combine the two places that set CPPFLAGS into one. Also, some settings
should be restricted to Windows only. More precisely, -Wno-comment is
a GCC-only option, but Windows in a makefile implies GCC at the moment.
Also, since -Wno-comment is more properly a preprocessor option, move it
to CPPFLAGS to simplify things a bit.
This involves moving perl's CORE library to the end of the include list,
and adding other compilation settings that plperl uses. This won't
completely fix the breakage currently being seen by gcc builds on
Windows, but it will let the build get further, and should be wholly
benign, if not beneficial, on *nix.
This provides a mechanism for specifying conversions between SQL data
types and procedural languages. As examples, there are transforms
for hstore and ltree for PL/Perl and PL/Python.
reviews by Pavel Stěhule and Andres Freund