On 11/30/24 19:45, David G. Johnston wrote:
> On Saturday, November 30, 2024, PopeRigby <poperigby(at)mailbox(dot)org> wrote:
>
> On 11/30/24 18:41, David G. Johnston wrote:
>> On Saturday, November 30, 2024, PopeRigby <poperigby(at)mailbox(dot)org>
>> wrote:
>>
>> On 11/30/24 17:27, David G. Johnston wrote:
>>> On Saturday, November 30, 2024, PopeRigby
>>> <poperigby(at)mailbox(dot)org> wrote:
>>>
>>> On 11/29/24 17:47, Adrian Klaver wrote:
>>>
>>> On 11/29/24 17:34, PopeRigby wrote:
>>>
>>> psql:all.sql:4104: ERROR: type "earth" does not exist
>>> LINE 1:
>>> ...ians($1))*sin(radians($2))),earth()*sin(radians($1)))::earth
>>>
>>> QUERY: SELECT
>>> cube(cube(cube(earth()*cos(radians($1))*cos(radians($2))),earth()*cos(radians($1))*sin(radians($2))),earth()*sin(radians($1)))::earth
>>> CONTEXT: SQL function "ll_to_earth" during inlining
>>> The earthdistance module is even getting added
>>> between the table with the earth type is added, so
>>> shouldn't there be no problem?
>>>
>>>
>>> The fact that “earth” is not schema qualified leads me to
>>> suspect you are getting bit by safe search_path environment
>>> rules.
>>>
>>> David J.
>>
>> Ah. How can I fix that?
>>
>> Since you are past the point of fixing the source to produce
>> valid dumps…that leaves finding the places in the text the lack
>> the schema qualification and manually adding them in.
>>
>> David J.
>>
> Oh also, it's the schema is specified as public on this line:
> https://gist.github.com/poperigby/fcb59eb6c22c6051800e06a0ec482b49#file-redacted_all-sql-L4111
> <https://gist.github.com/poperigby/fcb59eb6c22c6051800e06a0ec482b49#file-redacted_all-sql-L4111>
>
> Why is it not finding it? I queried public and earth was in there.
>
>
> Ok, so the error is not emanating from your code but rather the body
> of the ll_to_earth function defined in the earthdistance extension.
>
> David J.
>
By code do you mean my sql file created by pg_dumpall? Sorry, I'm just a
self-hoster so I'm not very well versed in Postgres. I'm just trying to
get my server back online.