On Mon, Oct 3, 2011 at 7:10 PM, Andrew Dunstan <and...@dunslane.net> wrote:
>> Agreed. If you remove that, the logical problem goes away and it >> becomes a simple problem of dumping the contents of postgresql.conf and >> having pg_ctl (and pg_upgrade) use that. Let me look at how much code >> that would take. >> > > Yeah, this pattern can be changed to have a config file that reads: > > data_directory = '/path/to/data' > include '/path/to/common/config' > > and I presume (or hope) that would meet your need, and not upset the FHS > purists. I kinda like the way the debian (and ubuntu) packages do it... They start pg_ctl/postgres like: ... -D /path/to/real-data/data-dir -c config_file=/etc/postgresql/$INSTANCE/postgresql.conf In /etc/postgresql/$INSTANCE/postgresql.conf, these are explictly set: data_directory=/path/to/real-data/data-dir hba_file=/etc/postgresql/$INSTANCE/pg_hba.conf ident_file=/etc/postgresql/$INSTANCE/pg_ident.conf external_pid_file=/var/run/postgresql/$INSTANCE.pid It actually looks in /etc/postgresql/$INSTANCE/postgresql.conf to find data_directory to use when invoking pg_ctl/postgres. But, in my opinion, there is enough flexibility with postgresql's config (and ability to pass un"recorded" options to postmaster at startup too) that pg_upgrade can't guarantee it's going to figure out every thing "automatically given a single $pgdata location to start from". That's simply not realistic. Distros who do stranger things than debian (and probably even Debian) are going to have to give their users guidance on how to call pg_upgrade with their specific setup of paths/configs/invocations. It's simply that simple. I'ld be happy enough if pg_upgrade could easily upgrade given a datadir that had a postgresql.conf in it, or possibly a postgresql.conf that had data_directory set in it. Anything else, and I say it's responsibility of whoever scripted the startup to be able to provide all the necessary information to pg_upgrade (be it by extra command line options, or crafting a special pg_data with symlinks that is more "normal"). a. -- Aidan Van Dyk Create like a god, ai...@highrise.ca command like a king, http://www.highrise.ca/ work like a slave. -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers