Re: Problems invoking psql. Help please. - Mailing list pgsql-sql

From Hugh Esco
Subject Re: Problems invoking psql. Help please.
Date
Msg-id 5.1.0.14.0.20021120015333.04220570@petra.cagreens.org
Whole thread Raw
Responses Re: Problems invoking psql. Help please.  (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>)
List pgsql-sql
Does "Could not execv" mean that I do not have rights to execute this script?
>biko:/usr/bin# ls -al | grep psql
>lrwxrwxrwx    1 root     root           10 Oct 10 16:24 psql -> pg_wrapper
>biko:/usr/bin#

This seems to say that Other users, like postgres, should be able to 
execute it.  I'm confused, here.

-- Hugh

I did this tonight

dpkg --purge postgresql
apt-get install postgresql

and am now still getting the following:

>biko:/usr/bin# psql -U postgres
>No database specified
>biko:/usr/bin# psql -U postgres template1
>Could not execv /usr/lib/postgresql/bin/psql
>biko:/usr/bin# psql -U postgres template0
>Could not execv /usr/lib/postgresql/bin/psql
>biko:/usr/bin# psql -U postgres ggp_test
>Could not execv /usr/lib/postgresql/bin/psql
>biko:/usr/bin#

My pg_hba.conf temporarily reads:
>local      all                                          trust
>host       all         127.0.0.1     255.255.255.255    trust
>host       template1   192.168.2.21  255.255.255.0      trust
>host         all         0.0.0.0       0.0.0.0             reject

(Eventually, before I take this live, I'll figure out the crypt part).

The postgresql installation is at 192.168.10.  I'm working from a shell at 
192.168.2.21.  But I also tried running this from the application server at 
2.10 as well and got the same errors.

And now pgAdmin II is giving me a connection error:
>An error has occured in pgAdmin II:frmConnect.cmdConnect_Click
>Number -2147467259
>Description: Could not connect to the server;
>Could not connect to remote socket.

/etc/postgresql/postgresql.conf includes a line reading:
>tcpip_socket = 1

which I assume means that I _should_ be able to make a TCP connection 
across the network.  Although I cannot seem to do so.

Working in Debian 3.0 Woody, with postgreSQL 7.2.  Still looking for clues, 
in fact I seem to be looking for more clues now than I was yesterday.

-- Hugh

At 05:20 PM 11/19/02 +0000, you wrote:
>Did you install your package using apt-get ?
>All the instalations that I do are using those tools from debian. You have 
>to see all the packages that you have instaled in your computer like:
>
>dpkg -l | grep postgresql
>ii  postgresql     7.2.1-2        Object-relational SQL database, descended fr
>ii  postgresql-cli 7.2.1-2        Front-end programs for PostgreSQL
>ii  postgresql-con 7.2.1-2        Additional facilities for PostgreSQL
>
>Then you do: dpkg --purge postgresql. You can now run the first command to 
>see if something is still installed. If some are instaled, the you remove 
>it using again dpkg --purge.
>
>Luis Sousa
>
>Hugh Esco wrote:
>
>>I have reinstalled before.  I wonder though, how I ensure that I have 
>>cleanly un-installed it first, so that I leave no residue from the 
>>previously botched installation around to mess things up the next time.
>>
>>-- Hugh Esco
>>
>>At 09:03 AM 11/19/02 +0000, Luis Sousa wrote:
>>
>>>Tom Lane wrote:
>>>Start over: delete your PG installation and reinstall the Debian
>>>package.  It seems very clear that you've got an incomplete package.
>>>regards, tom lane
>>>I agree with Tom Lane. Probably is the best thing to do. When you 
>>>install all it over, in theory, all the problems will solve by them selfs.
>>>
>>>Luis Sousa



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