Tom Lane wrote:
>
> Postgres has a bad habit of becoming very confused if the page header of
> a page on disk has become corrupted. In particular, bogus values in the
> pd_lower field tend to make it look like there are many more tuples than
> there really are, and of course these "tuples" contain garbage. That
> leads to core dumps, weird complaints about out-of-range transaction
> numbers (the latter generally in the form of an abort referencing a
> nonexistent pg_clog file), and other un-fun stuff.
>
> I'm thinking of modifying ReadBuffer() so that it errors out if the
What does the *error out* mean ?
Is there a way to make our way around the pages ?
> page read in does not contain either zeroes or a valid-looking header.
> (The exception for zeroes seems to be needed for hash indexes, which
> tend to initialize pages out-of-order.) This would make it much easier
> for people to recognize situations where a page header has become
> corrupted on disk.
>
> Comments? Can anyone think of a scenario where this would be a bad
> idea?
IIRC there was a similar thread long ago.
IMHO CRC isn't sufficient because CRC could be calculated
even for (silently) corrupted pages.
regards,
Hiroshi Inoue
http://www.geocities.jp/inocchichichi/psqlodbc/
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