Ahoy there, I'm the database admin of the Chemnitz Student's Network. Today we noticed a bug in pg_dump that makes it impossible for us to use it to create valid backups of our database. We're currently running pgsql 7.1.3, but I was able to reproduce the bug with the latest version, 7.1.2. We've got a table that inherits another one, and we had to add a new column to the mother table (and thus to the son, too). Now, if we dump the database, the columns of the INSERT resp. COPY commands for the data of the son table are in wrong order. A short sample to reproduce the behaviour (excuse the unimaginative identifiers):
CREATE TABLE mother (i1 integer, c1 char); CREATE TABLE son (c2 char) INHERITS (test1); ALTER TABLE mother ADD i2 integer; INSERT INTO son (i1, c1, c2, i2) VALUES (1, 'a', 'b', 2); INSERT INTO son (i1, c1, c2, i2) VALUES (3, 'c', 'd', 4); A (shortened) dump of this database looks like this: CREATE TABLE "mother" ( "i1" integer, "c1" character(1), "i2" integer ); CREATE TABLE "son" ( "c2" character(1) ) INHERITS ("mother"); COPY "son" FROM stdin; 1 a b 2 3 c d 4 \. As you can see, the columns aren't dropped in the order they are expected to be, so you can't restore that dump using psql. Cheers, Ingo ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/users-lounge/docs/faq.html