On Tue, 2012-09-04 at 10:31 -0400, Tom Lane wrote: > murr...@murrayc.com writes: > > At some point, probably in 9.1.5, the -k option to Postgres ("Unix-domain > > socket location" in --help), stopped accepting paths that contain spaces. > > > For instance, > > -k '/tmp/testglom2FPDKW/path with spaces/some_postgres_data' > > > It now fails with this error: > > FATAL: invalid list syntax for "unix_socket_directories" > > Ah, you're using the latest Fedora packaging of 9.1.x, which includes a > back-ported version of the unix_socket_directories change that's in > HEAD. -k now effectively takes a list of directory names, not just > one, and it's pickier about whitespace. > > IIRC, you can make it work if you put double quotes around the > space-containing name, so it'd look like this: > > -k '"/blah blah blah"'
Yes, thanks, that works for spaces, though it's rather odd. However, how should I now specify a path that has a " or a /, or \, which now cause similar errors with -k? Previously I could just use g_shell_quote() and forget about it: http://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Shell-related-Utilities.html#g-shell-quote To be honest, I don't have much interest in, or understanding of, this -k option anyway. I just use it because, when starting my temporary postgresql instance, it otherwise defaults to /var/run/postgresql/ (at least in this distro build) which is not available to normal users. I currently just specify the same directory that the postgresql data is in. Maybe I should just use /tmp instead. -- murr...@murrayc.com www.murrayc.com www.openismus.com -- Sent via pgsql-bugs mailing list (pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-bugs