Re: pg_upgrade FAIL: can't find tablespaces

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От Craig James
Тема Re: pg_upgrade FAIL: can't find tablespaces
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Msg-id CAFwQ8rc2DFOMU_eKqMFp=AJvLkuGby3V3XjnN33ME8=nU=uiTw@mail.gmail.com
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Ответ на pg_upgrade FAIL: can't find tablespaces  (Craig James <cjames@emolecules.com>)
Ответы Re: pg_upgrade FAIL: can't find tablespaces
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On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 11:59 AM, Craig James <cjames@emolecules.com> wrote:
I did pg_upgrade from 8.4.17 to 9.3.5. The upgrade claimed it was successful. However, when I start Postgres 9.3.5, I get an error message for every one of the roughly 250 databases:

LOG:  could not open tablespace directory "pg_tblspc/16828/PG_9.3_201306121": No such file or directory
LOG:  could not open tablespace directory "pg_tblspc/16523/PG_9.3_201306121": No such file or directory
LOG:  could not open tablespace directory "pg_tblspc/16768/PG_9.3_201306121": No such file or directory
LOG:  could not open tablespace directory "pg_tblspc/16715/PG_9.3_201306121": No such file or directory
... and so forth

My Postgres looks like this

   /data/postgres/main  - the PGDATA directory
   /data/postgres/tablespaces - where most of the data live

OK, I figured this out: pg_upgrade didn't follow symbolic links. Each of the missing files pointed to  /data/postgres/tablespaces, but the actual directory was in /data/postgres-8.4/tablespaces.  When I replaced /data/postgres/tablespaces with a symbolic link to /data/postgres-8.4/tablespaces, everything worked. 

Once everything is in order and I'm convinced 9.3.5 is working, I'll shut down, remove the symlink, and move the tablespaces directory to the new location.

Craig


Urgent question: Having started 9.3 (briefly), is it possible to revert to 8.4?  Or do I have to fully revert my 750GB database from a backup?

Question 2: Is there a way to get 9.3 to work? Something I did wrong with table spaces, or a step I missed?

I pretty much ran pg_upgrade per the instructions. See complete command and output below.

Thanks,
Craig


/usr/local/pgsql-9.3.5/bin/pg_upgrade \
  --link \
  --user=postgres \
  --old-bindir=/usr/local/pgsql-8.4.17/bin \
  --new-bindir=/usr/local/pgsql-9.3.5/bin \
  --old-datadir=/data/postgres/main \
  --new-datadir=/data/postgres-9.3/main \
  --jobs=4

Performing Consistency Checks
-----------------------------
Checking cluster versions                                   ok
Checking database user is a superuser                       ok
Checking for prepared transactions                          ok
Checking for reg* system OID user data types                ok
Checking for contrib/isn with bigint-passing mismatch       ok
Checking for large objects                                  warning

Your installation contains large objects.  The new database has an
additional large object permission table.  After upgrading, you will be
given a command to populate the pg_largeobject permission table with
default permissions.

Creating dump of global objects                             ok
Creating dump of database schemas
                                                            ok
Checking for presence of required libraries                 ok
Checking database user is a superuser                       ok
Checking for prepared transactions                          ok

If pg_upgrade fails after this point, you must re-initdb the
new cluster before continuing.

Performing Upgrade
------------------
Analyzing all rows in the new cluster                       ok
Freezing all rows on the new cluster                        ok
Deleting files from new pg_clog                             ok
Copying old pg_clog to new server                           ok
Setting next transaction ID for new cluster                 ok
Deleting files from new pg_multixact/offsets                ok
Setting oldest multixact ID on new cluster                  ok
Resetting WAL archives                                      ok
Setting frozenxid and minmxid counters in new cluster       ok
Restoring global objects in the new cluster                 ok
Adding support functions to new cluster                     ok
Restoring database schemas in the new cluster
                                                            ok
Setting minmxid counter in new cluster                      ok
Removing support functions from new cluster                 ok
Adding ".old" suffix to old global/pg_control               ok

If you want to start the old cluster, you will need to remove
the ".old" suffix from /data/postgres/main/global/pg_control.old.
Because "link" mode was used, the old cluster cannot be safely
started once the new cluster has been started.

Linking user relation files
                                                            ok
Setting next OID for new cluster                            ok
Sync data directory to disk                                 ok
Creating script to analyze new cluster                      ok
Creating script to delete old cluster                       ok
Checking for large objects                                  warning

Your installation contains large objects.  The new database has an
additional large object permission table, so default permissions must be
defined for all large objects.  The file
    pg_largeobject.sql
when executed by psql by the database superuser will set the default
permissions.


Upgrade Complete
----------------
Optimizer statistics are not transferred by pg_upgrade so,
once you start the new server, consider running:
    analyze_new_cluster.sh

Running this script will delete the old cluster's data files:
    delete_old_cluster.sh




--
---------------------------------
Craig A. James
Chief Technology Officer
eMolecules, Inc.
---------------------------------

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