> That was my thought at first as well. Unfortunately, as far as I can tell > from the log entries on startup (http://dpaste.org/KJ5g/), it does seem to be > loading the proper configuration file.
Oh, ok. > Is it possible that there's something off about my configuration values which > force pgpool to ignore them and use defaults? No idea. Is it possible for you to attch gdb to one of pgpool process and print the contens of "pool_config" value? It is a global variable and has all the configuration values. You want to type "p *pool_config" from gdb prompt. -- Tatsuo Ishii SRA OSS, Inc. Japan English: http://www.sraoss.co.jp/index_en.php Japanese: http://www.sraoss.co.jp > -- > Sean O'Connor > Developer / Saaspire > > On Thursday, December 9, 2010 at 7:16 PM, Tatsuo Ishii wrote: > >> >> > I'm having some trouble getting a connection through pgpool working and >> > any suggestions on what I am doing wrong would be tremendously helpful. >> > Below are my configuration file, relevant chunk of log file, and a >> > terminal session of me successfully connecting to each backend directly >> > and failing when hitting pgpool: >> > >> > >> >> Your DB servers are '10.124.51.89' and '10.98.182.126' but pgpool >> tries to connect to UNIX domain socket and raises an ERROR. It seems >> your pgpool is looking at different configuration file what you are >> prodiving. To find what pgpool is looking at, you might want to turn >> on -d (debug) option or you could use strace or some such to find what >> pgpool opens for pgpool.conf. >> -- >> Tatsuo Ishii >> SRA OSS, Inc. Japan >> English: http://www.sraoss.co.jp/index_en.php >> Japanese: http://www.sraoss.co.jp _______________________________________________ Pgpool-general mailing list [email protected] http://pgfoundry.org/mailman/listinfo/pgpool-general
