On 27/09/2007, Grant Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > hmmmmmm - Yes, Sorry. > I tried to be short and sweet but sometimes it's just unclear.......... > Here's some further info. NOT short and sweet. :-)
Thanks -- this is helpful! > I'm using the wiki with the "main" instructions and the 1.2 addendum (for > questions 4, 20, etc... ) > found here -> > http://open-ils.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=installing_evergreen_on_ubuntu_7.04 > Good, so you're definitely on the right track. > > * What happened when you ran "sudo make install" in the Evergreen > > directory? > > Clearly I need to look at my pg_hba.conf file! > > WARNING! > > storage-bootstrap will DESTROY all data within all of the ILS tables in your > database. > The database this script will touch has a DBI DSN of > dbi:Pg:host=eg-server;dbname=evergreen;port=5432 > Type control-c to avoid destroying all of the data. Type enter to continue... > > > [: 6: ==: unexpected operator > cd ./extras/import/../../sql/Pg/; > /home/evergreen-admin/eg-srcs/Evergreen-ILS-1.2.0-rc4/Open-ILS/src/sql/Pg > You may be prompted several times for your database password... > psql: FATAL: missing or erroneous pg_hba.conf file > HINT: See server log for details. Right. So you definitely need to correct your pg_hba.conf file. You might also want to tweak your postgresql.conf file to direct the log entries into a log file so that you can have a better chance of figuring out what's going on. I'm afraid there's not much use in going further until you have PostgreSQL figured out. If this is a totally clean system (as in, it's a clean install of Ubuntu dedicated to installing Evergreen on it), you might want to simply uninstall PostgreSQL, wipe the existing config files (like pg_hba.conf), and reinstall it; then save the config files before you start modifying them for the Evergreen install bits. An alternative, of course, is to point at a PostgreSQL server on another machine - but that means that you'll have to figure out the right pg_hba.conf changes to enable authentication to the PostgreSQL server from a remote machine. So either way, you've got some wrestling to do with PostgreSQL (and I'll freely admit that the pg_hba.conf piece is one of my least favourite parts of an otherwise superb database). -- Dan Scott Laurentian University
