From: | Scott Marlowe <scott(dot)marlowe(at)gmail(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | Kevin Kempter <kevink(at)consistentstate(dot)com> |
Cc: | pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: where is pg_resetxlog ? |
Date: | 2009-07-26 05:40:37 |
Message-ID: | dcc563d10907252240p11732f8dr721007cb9844e3fb@mail.gmail.com |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-general |
On Sat, Jul 25, 2009 at 9:48 PM, Kevin
Kempter<kevink(at)consistentstate(dot)com> wrote:
> On Saturday 25 July 2009 20:05:14 Scott Marlowe wrote:
>> On Sat, Jul 25, 2009 at 1:30 PM, Kevin
>>
>> Kempter<kevink(at)consistentstate(dot)com> wrote:
>> > On Saturday 25 July 2009 13:23:54 Scott Marlowe wrote:
>> >> On Sat, Jul 25, 2009 at 1:08 PM, Kevin
>> >>
>> >> Kempter<kevink(at)consistentstate(dot)com> wrote:
>> >> > On Saturday 25 July 2009 13:02:52 Scott Marlowe wrote:
>> >> >> On Sat, Jul 25, 2009 at 12:55 PM, Kevin
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Kempter<kevink(at)consistentstate(dot)com> wrote:
>> >> >> > Hi all;
>> >> >> >
>> >> >> > I'm trying to restore from a tar of the filesystem on a debian box
>> >> >> > and I get xlog errors.
>> >> >> >
>> >> >> > I suspect I need to run pg_resetxlog but I cannot find it anywhere,
>> >> >> > where would I find pg_resetxlog on a debian box that was installed
>> >> >> > via the deb packages ? or how do I get it ?
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Wait, if you're restoring a backup, to a freshly initted db, then you
>> >> >> shouldn't be getting any kind of pg_xlog errors. If you are, then
>> >> >> there's likely something wrong with your server that pg_resetxlog
>> >> >> isn't going to fix in the long term. Are you running on windows with
>> >> >> anti-virus software or have some other kind of possible problem that
>> >> >> could be causing a problem with the postmaster writing to the hard
>> >> >> drives?
>> >> >
>> >> > we're not restoring from a pg_dump. We were in the process of moving
>> >> > the db to a new server. We brought the db down (on host A) and did an
>> >> > rsync of all the db dir's (including tablespace dir's) to host B.
>> >> >
>> >> > Then bad things were done to host A and we want to get back to where
>> >> > we started. So, we stopped the db on host A and rsync'ed the files
>> >> > back from host B to host A. Now when I try and start the db I see all
>> >> > these tx sement errors in the log.
>> >> >
>> >> > We're actually ok if we loose anything that was in the pg_xlog dir.
>> >>
>> >> Did you rsync the pg_xlog and pg_clog (i.e. EVERYTHING under data/) or
>> >> just the base directory? You really need to do an rsync of
>> >> everything, not most everything.
>> >
>> > we rsync'ed EVERYTHING (the entire directory and all sub-dirs)
>>
>> OK, on my laptop, in the /var/lib/postgresql/8.3/main there's a bunch
>> of dirs that look like this:
>>
>> base pg_clog pg_subtrans pg_twophase pg_xlog
>> postmaster.pid server.crt
>> global pg_multixact pg_tblspc PG_VERSION postmaster.opts
>> root.crt server.key
>>
>> Did you rsync the base dir only, or all of the directories above?
>> Cause if you just rsynced base, you need the rest of them, as well.
>
> I rsync'd the /var/lib/postgresql/8.3/main dir. However several of the sub-
> dirs were soft links (pg_xlog, server.cert, root.cert and server.key) so I
> unfortunately did not get the data from the links' real location since they
> all pointed to outside of the /var/lib/postgresql/8.3/main tree
I'd do it again with -L
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