On Thu, Jul 10, 2014 at 06:38:26PM -0400, Bruce Momjian wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 10, 2014 at 06:17:14PM -0400, Bruce Momjian wrote:
> > Well, we are going to need to call internal C functions, often bypassing
> > their typical call sites and the assumption about locking, etc. Perhaps
> > this could be done from a plpgsql function. We could add and drop a
> > dummy column to force TOAST table creation --- we would then only need a
> > way to detect if a function _needs_ a TOAST table, which was skipped in
> > binary upgrade mode previously.
> >
> > That might be a minimalistic approach.
>
> I have thought some more on this. I thought I would need to open
> pg_class in C and do complex backend stuff, but I now realize I can do
> it from libpq, and just call ALTER TABLE and I think that always
> auto-checks if a TOAST table is needed. All I have to do is query
> pg_class from libpq, then construct ALTER TABLE commands for each item,
> and it will optionally create the TOAST table if needed. I just have to
> use a no-op ALTER TABLE command, like SET STATISTICS.
Attached is a completed patch which handles oid conflicts in pg_class
and pg_type for TOAST tables that were not needed in the old cluster but
are needed in the new one. I was able to recreate a failure case and
this fixed it.
The patch need to be backpatched because I am getting more-frequent bug
reports from users using pg_upgrade to leave now-end-of-life'ed 8.4.
There is not a good work-around for pg_upgrade failures without this
fix, but at least pg_upgrade throws an error.
--
Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> http://momjian.us
EnterpriseDB http://enterprisedb.com
+ Everyone has their own god. +