Re: Question: drop database problem - Mailing list pgsql-admin
From | Ben Kim |
---|---|
Subject | Re: Question: drop database problem |
Date | |
Msg-id | Pine.GSO.4.10.10410261234550.13269-100000@edsun.coe.tamu.edu Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: Question: drop database problem (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>) |
List | pgsql-admin |
Thanks for the advice!! I'll probably add those PGDATA variables to my startup script. Also, is there a way to circumvent this error (of missing $PGDATA3)? Otherwise I'll need to wait for a couple of months if I have to restart the server. The database in question, and the datpath, has not been used for some time. It didn't give an error about the missing env. variables when the server started, so we didn't bother about it as long as it starts. It seems the information is somewhere in the system (because I can still use the database and see that it's correctly changing OS files) so I vaguely guess there's some difference in the startup code and shutdown code. On a side note, I wonder if it's possible to change postgresql's smart mode to something like Apache's graceful restart. This will give me some freedom to restart the server any time. (Postgres's smart shutdown blocks new connections - Apache's graceful accepts new connections with new configuration) http://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.0/stopping.html apachectl -k graceful ===================== The USR1 or graceful signal causes the parent process to advise the children to exit after their current request (or to exit immediately if they're not serving anything). The parent re-reads its configuration files and re-opens its log files. As each child dies off the parent replaces it with a child from the new generation of the configuration, which begins serving new requests immediately. http://www.postgresql.org/docs/7.3/interactive/postmaster-shutdown.html SIGTERM ======= After receiving SIGTERM, the postmaster disallows new connections, but lets existing backends end their work normally. It shuts down only after all of the backends terminate normally. This is Smart Shutdown. Thanks again, you are great. Ben Kim Database Developer/Systems Administrator College of Education Texas A&M University On Mon, 25 Oct 2004, Tom Lane wrote: > Ben Kim <bkim@coe.tamu.edu> writes: > > I'm starting it with something like the following, as root in /etc/init.d > > script. > > > su pgsql -c "/usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl -D /usr/local/pgsql/data > > -p /usr/local/pgsql/bin/postmaster start" > > > And pgsql has PGDATA3 defined in .cshrc. > > su is most likely executing its -c command with /bin/sh, which will pay > zero attention to .cshrc. You may need to set up a .profile as well as > .cshrc. Also, I think that su won't cause *any* of these setup scripts > to be executed unless you use the "-" or "-l" options; a bare su just > runs the command in your current root environment. > > This stuff varies across different Unix variants, but it's uniformly > a source of gotchas :-(. Read your su and shell man pages carefully. > > > Will I have to shut down the server and restart it (introduce PGDATA3 > > properly) before I can drop that particular database? > > Yeah. That part's not so hard: if you restart the postmaster manually > then it will inherit your interactive variables. But I do *not* > recommend that, because it'll break after your next reboot. You need to > do the legwork to be sure that the variables show up in the basic > boot-time context. > > Again, this definitely sucks, and we are moving away from it as fast as > we can. But that's where things stand in current releases. > > regards, tom lane > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? > > http://archives.postgresql.org >
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