Hi Tomm
I don;t understand how it's related with postgresql installation. I never
had this problem before.
My locale is set:
debian:~# locale -a
C
en_US.utf8
POSIX
iuri de araujo sampaio <iuri ( dot ) sampaio ( at ) gmail ( dot ) com>
writes:
> No, I=C2=B4m not sure.
> Assuming i=C2=B4ve got a locale problem, how do i get rid of it?
> re-installing postgres??
> I already tried that a couple of times and it didn=C2=B4t succeed
> is it an option to re-install my OS (debian etch)?
> or just apt-get the respective locale support?
You need to be sure that LANG is set to something valid (ie, something
listed by "locale -a") when you initdb.
regards, tom lane
On Dec 18, 2007 10:48 PM, iuri de araujo sampaio <iuri.sampaio@gmail.com>
wrote:
> No, I=B4m not sure.
> Assuming i=B4ve got a locale problem, how do i get rid of it?
> re-installing postgres??
> I already tried that a couple of times and it didn=B4t succeed
> is it an option to re-install my OS (debian etch)?
> or just apt-get the respective locale support?
>
>
> iuri
>
> On Wed, 2007-12-19 at 00:29 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> > "Iuri Sampaio" <iuri.sampaio@gmail.com> writes:
> > > I've got a fatal error when i try to start postgresql service.
> > > I debugged my scripts and the error came up right after i ran the
> followed
> > > ltree installation script.
> >
> > There's nothing in what you show that seems to have anything to do with
> > ltree. Are you sure the installation was working at all? It looks to
> > me that you've got a locale configuration problem.
> >
> > regards, tom lane
>
>