On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 04:29:19PM +0200, Meik Weißbach wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> we want to upgrade our database from Postgres 8.3.23 to 9.1.12 using
> pg_upgrade. The documentation on pg_upgrade
> (http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/pgupgrade.html) states
> the following:
>
> "Also, the default datetime storage format changed to integer after
> PostgreSQL 8.3. pg_upgrade will check that the datetime storage
> format used by the old and new clusters match. Make sure your new
> cluster is built with the configure flag
> --disable-integer-datetimes."
>
> We have a SLES 11 system. We installed Postgres 9.1.12 using Yast.
> We assume that our installation was built WITHOUT
> --disable-integer-datetimes.
>
> The pg_upgrade is running without any complaints. Since we assume
> that our 9.1-server is built without disable-integer-datetimes, we
> expect pg_upgrade to fail or giving some kind of notice.
>
> What is the expected behavior of pg_upgrade in the case that
> 9.1-server is not built with with disable-integer-datetimes?
>
> How do we determine, whether or not a server is built with
> disable-integer-datetimes?
pg_upgrade --check will definitely complain about a timestamp storage
mismatch. Odds are your packager built 8.3 with integer timestamps.
Run pg_controldata on the 8.3 cluster and look at:
Date/time type storage: 64-bit integers
This shows integer timestamps.
--
Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> http://momjian.us
EnterpriseDB http://enterprisedb.com
+ Everyone has their own god. +