Re: PostgreSQL 8.1.0 catalog corruption - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Tom Lane
Subject Re: PostgreSQL 8.1.0 catalog corruption
Date
Msg-id 6136.1132618713@sss.pgh.pa.us
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In response to Re: PostgreSQL 8.1.0 catalog corruption  (Bob Ippolito <bob@redivi.com>)
Responses Re: PostgreSQL 8.1.0 catalog corruption  (Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@commandprompt.com>)
List pgsql-hackers
Bob Ippolito <bob@redivi.com> writes:
> On Nov 21, 2005, at 3:56 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
>> Well, I count at least a couple hundred deleted versions of that table
>> row :-(.  What the heck were you doing with it?

> The ETL process keeps trying until it succeeds or someone stops it,  
> so I guess that's why there's so much churn in there for that table.   
> Kept trying to create it, and ran into the issue.  I'd estimate  
> around 1700 to 1800 dead versions of that table, because it ran for  
> some time before I noticed and stopped it... this is just a test box  
> after all, I don't have 8.1 in production yet (thankfully!).

Um, no, that theory doesn't seem to explain the evidence.  A failed
insertion would result in a row with an uncommitted XMIN and no XMAX.
All of the entries I'm seeing have both XMIN and XMAX set.  A good-size
fraction have the same XMIN and XMAX (but different CMIN and CMAX), but
I see some that have different XMIN and XMAX.  It looks to me like the
table was definitely created successfully, and it survived across
multiple transactions ... but something was doing a lot of DDL changes
on it.  If we could find out what, maybe we could reproduce the problem.
        regards, tom lane


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