[Forwarding to the list. Please keep the list copied; for one
thing, there is likely to be someone there who has heard of Arch
Linux or pacman, which I have not. This is more of a question
regarding how the packagers for that distro intend for upgrades to
occur, not a bug in PostgreSQL itself.]
Dedanna <dedanna@bjoernvold.com> wrote:
I ran in Arch Linux, from the repos, pacman -Syu, and postgresql
updated. That's all I know. I've successfully downgraded since, to:
pacman -Q postgresql
postgresql 8.4.4-6
The update initially was from regular updates.
It was an update I didn't expect, btw - so just ran it and let it
roll like any other.
Loaded up Amarok1 in Arch, where I use it for my musicdb, and found
that postgresql wasn't running that way. I tried to start it
manually, tried rebooting, etc. - nothing worked.
Kevin Grittner wrote:
> "Kim Garren"<dedanna@bjoernvold.com> wrote:
>
>
>> Received update to postgresql 9.0.1-2 yesterday
>>
>
> How? From where? What were you running before?
>
>
>> Once booted, I try to start it manually, with the following
>> result:
>>
>> # /etc/rc.d/postgresql start
>> :: Starting PostgreSQL
>> [BUSY] server starting
>>
>> [DONE]
>>
>
> What is showing for `ps aux | grep postgres` ? What is in the
> logs?
>
>
>> https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=107656
>>
>
>
>> https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/21560
>>
>
> Both of these make it sound like you were upgrading from
> PostgreSQL
> 8.4. This requires a database conversion. What technique did you
> use for that? (The more specific you can be about the exact
> steps, the more likely it is that someone will be able to help
you.)
>
>
>> I have lost my music db because of this.
>>
>
> Not unless you deleted your data directory. If you don't back it
> up regularly, it would certainly be wise to do so before a major
> release upgrade. Making a recursive copy of the database data
> directory would be a very good idea right now.
>
> -Kevin