Hi,
PostgreSQL 9.2.7, Linux 2.6.32
Several days ago I found one of my servers out of connections,
pg_stat_activity showed that everything was waiting for the DROP/ALTER
INDEX transaction (see the record 2 below), that, as I guess, was
waiting for the function call (record 1).
-[ RECORD 1 ]
On Tue, Jul 15, 2014 at 8:46 AM, David G Johnston <
david.g.johns...@gmail.com> wrote:
> John McKown wrote
> > I have a table which has some "raw" data in it. By "raw", I mean it is
> > minimally processed from a log file. Every week, I update this table by
> > processing the weekly log using awk
On 7/15/2014 2:54 PM, Andy Colson wrote:
Ah, yea, sorry, I don't really mean record #1, I mean hard drive seek
to address 1. (where address came from the index lookup)
of course, its a file+offset, so there's at least 1-2 more levels of
indirection before you get to physical addresses on t
On 7/15/2014 3:54 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
On 7/15/2014 1:26 PM, Andy Colson wrote:
As I understand indexes, they are a key value pair, that contain a
value and a position. You lookup the value then use the position to
seek into the database to load the record.
indexes are stored as a B-tree.
On 7/15/2014 1:26 PM, Andy Colson wrote:
As I understand indexes, they are a key value pair, that contain a
value and a position. You lookup the value then use the position to
seek into the database to load the record.
indexes are stored as a B-tree. each terminal node has a block number
fo
Andy Colson writes:
> As I understand indexes, they are a key value pair, that contain a value
> and a position. You lookup the value then use the position to seek into
> the database to load the record.
> Do we, or could we, load all the the matching index records, then sort
> them by positi
> -Original Message-
> From: pgsql-general-ow...@postgresql.org [mailto:pgsql-general-
> ow...@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of Andy Colson
> Sent: Tuesday, July 15, 2014 4:27 PM
> To: pgsql
> Subject: [GENERAL] PG index architecture
>
> I was thinking about indexes, and am kinda curious about
On 07/15/2014 07:45 AM, basti wrote:
psql in version 9.1 connect to server 9.3 get the same error as above.
=>
dpkg -l | grep libpq
ii libpq5 9.1.13-0wheezy1
amd64PostgreSQL C client library
the other I cant say, now thats
ii libpq5:amd64
I was thinking about indexes, and am kinda curious about sequential access.
I know nothing of PG guts, so this might even be a dumb question.
As I understand indexes, they are a key value pair, that contain a value
and a position. You lookup the value then use the position to seek into
the da
basti wrote:
> hostall all localhost md5
>
> then I get the following error:
>
> password authentication failed for user "testuser"
Aside from submitting a wrong password, a less obvious cause for this error
message is when the password is expired.
Not so long ago, th
On 07/15/2014 07:17 AM, basti wrote:
Hello Adrian,
Yes I use the correct cluster.
password authentication failed for user "testuser" ...
is a line from the postgres log
Yes I know what "trust" mean.
psql in version 9.3 can connect without error,
psql in version 9.1 connect to server 9.3 get t
psql in version 9.1 connect to server 9.3 get the same error as above.
=>
dpkg -l | grep libpq
ii libpq5 9.1.13-0wheezy1
amd64PostgreSQL C client library
the other I cant say, now thats
ii libpq5:amd64 9.4~beta1-2.pgdg70+1
amd64
On 07/15/2014 07:17 AM, basti wrote:
Hello Adrian,
Yes I use the correct cluster.
password authentication failed for user "testuser" ...
is a line from the postgres log
Yes I know what "trust" mean.
psql in version 9.3 can connect without error,
psql in version 9.1 connect to server 9.3 get t
Hello Adrian,
Yes I use the correct cluster.
password authentication failed for user "testuser" ...
is a line from the postgres log
Yes I know what "trust" mean.
psql in version 9.3 can connect without error,
psql in version 9.1 connect to server 9.3 get the same error as above.
I have done th
Is there any way to find when a table was last successfully CLUSTER'd, say from
pg_catalog?
Last analyzed and last vacuumed times are available, but I can't seem to find
anything to do with reclustering.
Thanks,
Steve.
On 07/15/2014 05:52 AM, basti wrote:
The last days I have done some tests and it seems that postgres 9.3 and
php 5.4.4 can't work together.
I find that hard to believe.
Can someone please confirm:
";
$con = pg_connect("host=$host port=$port dbname=$db user=$user
password=$pass")
or die
John McKown wrote
> I have a table which has some "raw" data in it. By "raw", I mean it is
> minimally processed from a log file. Every week, I update this table by
> processing the weekly log using awk to create a "psql script" file which
> looks similar to:
>
> COPY rawdata FROM STDIN;
> li
Thanks
On Tuesday, July 15, 2014, Michael Paquier
wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 15, 2014 at 9:42 AM, Néstor Boscán wrote:
>> I want to know if there is a way to get the last modified date of the
>> objects structure like tables, views or sequences.
> Not directly within the server if this is what you me
The last days I have done some tests and it seems that postgres 9.3 and
php 5.4.4 can't work together.
Can someone please confirm:
";
$con = pg_connect("host=$host port=$port dbname=$db user=$user
password=$pass")
or die ("Could not connect to server\n");
print_r($con);
?>
work well with
hos
I have a table which has some "raw" data in it. By "raw", I mean it is
minimally processed from a log file. Every week, I update this table by
processing the weekly log using awk to create a "psql script" file which
looks similar to:
COPY rawdata FROM STDIN;
lines created by awk script
\.
Th
> -Original Message-
> From: Pujol Mathieu [mailto:mathieu.pu...@realfusio.com]
> Sent: Dienstag, 15. Juli 2014 08:40
> To: Marc Mamin
> Subject: Re: [GENERAL] operator is not unique: smallint[] @>
> smallint[] You might need to add explicit type casts (!)
>
>
> Le 14/07/2014 13:32, Marc
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