On Friday 26 November 2004 03:11 pm, Tom Lane wrote: > Adrian Klaver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > Sorry should have been more explicit. The dump loaded functions depending > > on plsh before the function that created the language. In fact it did not > > instalI the language at all. > > Ah. Looking back at your first message, I see you'd installed plsh into > the pg_catalog schema rather than a user schema. pg_dump specifically > doesn't dump anything that appears in pg_catalog; it assumes all of that > stuff is supplied by the system. So the above is expected behavior. > > I haven't looked at plsh, but if it installs stuff directly into > pg_catalog, I'd call that a mistake. At least it shouldn't be the > default behavior. > > (Note for pedantry's sake: a language doesn't really belong to any > particular schema; but its support functions do, and pg_dump treats > the language as belonging to the same schema as the support functions.) > > regards, tom lane > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 1: subscribe and unsubscribe commands go to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Problem solved. The language handler function was in both the pg_catalog and public schema. The pg_catalog version was masking the public version. Removing the pg_catalog version allowed the pg_dump program to sort things out properly and the restore completed with out a problem. Thanks for the insight. -- Adrian Klaver [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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