Corrupted or not, after a crash take a snapshot of the data tree
before firing it back up again. Doesn't take that much time
(especially with a netapp filer) and it allows for a virtually
unlimited number of attempts to solve the trouble or debug.
--
Rod Taylor
BarChord Entertainment Inc.
Vadim Mikheev wrote:
>
> > There's a report of startup recovery failure in Japan.
> > Redo done but ...
> > Unfortunately I have no time today.
>
> Please ask to start up with wal_debug = 1...
>
Isn't it very difficult for dbas to leave the
corrupted database as it is ?
ISTM we could hardly exp
On Mon, 30 Apr 2001, Tom Lane wrote:
> The Hermit Hacker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Does anyone have any outstanding fixes for v7.1.x that they want to see in
> > *before* we do this release? Any points unresolved that anyone knows
> > about that we need to look at?
>
> FWIW, I've finished
Philip Warner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Do you have a alternate suggestion as to how to solve the problems it has
> backing up the regression DB?
One possibility is to fix ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN to maintain the same
column ordering in parents and children.
COPY with specified columns may in
> I dug through the conversions involved (basically date_in and date_out).
> AFAICS the only place where timezone could possibly get involved is that
> DecodeDateTime attempts to derive a timezone for the given date/time.
> It does this by calling mktime() (line 878 in datetime.c in current
> sour
At 11:36 30/04/01 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
>
>COPY is designed as a simple, fast, reliable,
>low-overhead data transfer mechanism for backup and restore. The more
>warts we add to it, the less well it will serve that purpose.
>
Do you have a alternate suggestion as to how to solve the problems it
Thomas Lockhart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> Thomas, what do you think of the persistent reports of date conversion
>> problems at DST boundaries, eg, Ayal Leibowitz's report today in
>> pgsql-bugs? I cannot reproduce any such problem --- and my local
>> timezone database claims that MET DST tr
Jan Wieck wrote:
>
> Guys,
>
> while analyzing some stuff I came across something that looks
> like a bug in the ODBC driver to me. I'm by far not the ODBC
> user I should be to fix it, so could someone else please take
> another look?
>
> The symptom is when the driver is i
Bruce Momjian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> We do have that not-quite-done QNX4 port patch in hand. Perhaps we
>> should give Bernd another day to respond to the comments on that and
>> squeeze it into 7.1.1.
> There will surely be a 7.1.2. I vote against waiting for it.
Possibly, but one hop
> The Hermit Hacker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Does anyone have any outstanding fixes for v7.1.x that they want to see in
> > *before* we do this release? Any points unresolved that anyone knows
> > about that we need to look at?
>
> FWIW, I've finished committing all the bug fixes I have p
The Hermit Hacker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Does anyone have any outstanding fixes for v7.1.x that they want to see in
> *before* we do this release? Any points unresolved that anyone knows
> about that we need to look at?
FWIW, I've finished committing all the bug fixes I have pending.
The
On Mon, 30 Apr 2001, Tom Lane wrote:
> I think it'd be better to put effort into an external data translation
> utility that can deal with column selection, data reformatting, CR/LF
> conversion, and all those other silly little issues that come up when
> you need to move data from one DBMS to an
"Magnus Naeslund\(f\)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Where do get a listing of what PQftype() can return to me?
>>
>> select oid, typname from pg_type
> Does these change often?
The system type OIDs are stable. User-defined types would probably have
a new OID after a dump and reload.
> Or cou
From: "Tom Lane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[snip]
>
> The system type OIDs are stable. User-defined types would probably have
> a new OID after a dump and reload.
>
> > Or could i do like the ODBC driver, autogenerate a .h out of that table.
>
> I would not recommend relying on compiled-in OID knowledg
From: "Tom Lane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> "Magnus Naeslund\(f\)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Where do get a listing of what PQftype() can return to me?
>
> select oid, typname from pg_type
>
> regards, tom lane
Does these change often?
Or could i do like the ODBC driver, autogenerate a .h out
> Hehe, match the docs? The docs used to be perfectly accurate until you
> changed them.
;)
---(end of broadcast)---
TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ?
http://www.postgresql.org/users-lounge/docs/faq.html
> Thomas, what do you think of the persistent reports of date conversion
> problems at DST boundaries, eg, Ayal Leibowitz's report today in
> pgsql-bugs? I cannot reproduce any such problem --- and my local
> timezone database claims that MET DST transitions are the last week of
> March, never th
Tom Lane wrote:
> Most likely, you removed the user that owned ro_ellipse. Create a
> user with the same usesysid shown as ro_ellipse's relowner, or else
> change the relowner field to point at an extant user.
>
> I believe 7.1's pg_dump copes with this sort of thing more gracefully...
>
>
Karen saw me importing data into a database using pgaccess.
Again, this could be useful to someone that it is not a "superuser".
But only superusers can use pgaccess. What a shame :-(
Fernando
P.S.: pgaccess has a much more limited import facility - only text files
and you can only change the
> Alfred Perlstein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > It would be very helpful if the COPY command could be expanded
> > in order to provide positional parameters.
>
> I think it's a bad idea to try to expand COPY into a full-tilt data
> import/conversion utility, which is the direction that this so
* Tom Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [010430 08:37] wrote:
> Alfred Perlstein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > It would be very helpful if the COPY command could be expanded
> > in order to provide positional parameters.
>
> I think it's a bad idea to try to expand COPY into a full-tilt data
> import/co
Thomas Lockhart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Nothing serious, but I would like to apply a patch to allow IDENT
> strings (e.g. 'hour') to be accepted by the SQL92 EXTRACT() function. We
> accept those for date_part(), which is what EXTRACT() is translated to
> by the parser, and it seems to be a
Alfred Perlstein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It would be very helpful if the COPY command could be expanded
> in order to provide positional parameters.
I think it's a bad idea to try to expand COPY into a full-tilt data
import/conversion utility, which is the direction that this sort of
sugges
Thomas Lockhart writes:
> > > Nothing serious, but I would like to apply a patch to allow IDENT
> > > strings (e.g. 'hour') to be accepted by the SQL92 EXTRACT() function. We
> > > accept those for date_part(), which is what EXTRACT() is translated to
> > > by the parser, and it seems to be a rea
> It might be worth making a simple utility (could be based on Bryan
> White's pg_check) to grovel through the raw pg_class bits and extract
> relfilenode info the hard way. You'd only need it in certain disaster
> scenarios, but when you did need it you'd need it bad.
>
> So far we have not see
Thomas Lockhart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> But it is possible, under many circumstances, for query optimization to
> be a benefit for a many-table query. The docs indicate that explicit
> join syntax bypasses that, even for inner joins, so you may find that
> this syntax is a net loss in perfor
Vince Vielhaber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> Oh, you did a direct postgres backend connect. Yes, that will work
>> fine. Good idea if the postmaster is down. I originally thought you
>> meant reading the pg_class file raw. Of course, that would be really
>> hard because there is no way to kn
Horst Herb wrote:
> > I downloaded it. The directories are two characters in length, the
> > files are numbers, and it is a mixture of C++, Python, and Pascal. Need
> > I say more. :-)
>
> 1.) What is wrong with a mixture of C++, Python and Pascal? Nothing IMHO.
>
> 2.) The directory structure
> > Nothing serious, but I would like to apply a patch to allow IDENT
> > strings (e.g. 'hour') to be accepted by the SQL92 EXTRACT() function. We
> > accept those for date_part(), which is what EXTRACT() is translated to
> > by the parser, and it seems to be a reasonable to the standard.
> But wh
On Mon, 30 Apr 2001, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
> Basically:
> COPY "webmaster" FROM stdin;
>
> could become:
> COPY "webmaster" FIELDS "id", "name", "ssn" FROM stdin;
We'd need some way of making field name dumping optional, because
one of the nice things about not having the field names appear i
Guys,
while analyzing some stuff I came across something that looks
like a bug in the ODBC driver to me. I'm by far not the ODBC
user I should be to fix it, so could someone else please take
another look?
The symptom is when the driver is in AUTOCOMMIT=OFF, closing
the
Bruce Momjian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I can see Interbase, MySQL, and SAP DB as being three database that
> would be worth researching. I am willing to assist anyone who wants to
> give it a try. I have all the sources here myself. I even have old
> University Ingres, Mariposa, and Postgre
On Sun, 29 Apr 2001, Bruce Momjian wrote:
> > > I think parsing the file contents is too hard. The database would have
> > > to be running and I would use psql.
> >
> > I don't know, I recovered someone's database using a "raw" connection ...
> > wasn't that difficult once I figured out the form
It would be very helpful if the COPY command could be expanded
in order to provide positional parameters.
I noticed that it didn't a while back and it can really hurt
someone when they happen to try to use pg_dump to move data
from one database to another database and they happened to
create the
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