On 09/10/2013 10:37 AM, Chris Curvey wrote:


Another development (possibly unrelated):  I tried **dumping** with
–no-privileges –no-tablespace –no-owner, and the restore went fine.


Probably has to do with whether you are dumping plain text or custom format:

http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.2/interactive/app-pgdump.html

-O
--no-owner
Do not output commands to set ownership of objects to match the original database. By default, pg_dump issues ALTER OWNER or SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION statements to set ownership of created database objects. These statements will fail when the script is run unless it is started by a superuser (or the same user that owns all of the objects in the script). To make a script that can be restored by any user, but will give that user ownership of all the objects, specify -O.

This option is only meaningful for the plain-text format. For the archive formats, you can specify the option when you call pg_restore.



--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@gmail.com


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