OK I will try that, thanks
On 6/17/2020 11:19 AM, Joshua Drake wrote:
Susan
You can use -Uvh to upgrade the rpms on the existing machine. You can
then use symlinks to link the expected pgsql data directories. Make
sure you take a backup, and stop the service before you proceed.
JD
On Tue,
Susan
You can use -Uvh to upgrade the rpms on the existing machine. You can then
use symlinks to link the expected pgsql data directories. Make sure you
take a backup, and stop the service before you proceed.
JD
On Tue, Jun 16, 2020 at 7:12 AM Susan Joseph
wrote:
> So when I first started wor
So when I first started working with PostgreSQL I was using the latest version
(11.2). I don't want to move to 12 yet but I would like to get my 11.2 up to
11.8. Due to my servers not being connected to the Internet I ended up
downloading the libraries and building the files locally. My que