What I always do is "ps -axf", which will display a "tree" of the processes : you'll 
know which ones are children of the others.
I don't know if the "dead" postmaster will be shown in a readable location... The 
problem seems to be somewhere else (kills/signals to the postmaster/backends, not 
correctly disconnected connections, etc)

Nicolas Huillard
G.H.S
Directeur Technique
T�l : +33 1 43 21 16 66
Fax : +33 1 56 54 02 18
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.ghs.fr


-----Message d'origine-----
De:     Len Morgan [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Date:   samedi 22 avril 2000 17:02
�:      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Objet:  [ADMIN] Dead Postmasters

On a couple of my installations, I've noticed that after a few days there
are several "dead" postmasters (i.e., not associated with any running
backend).  When I do a ps -ax (RedHat 6.1, Postgresql 6.5.3) I see:

..
[postmaster]
[postmaster]
[postmaster]
[postmaster]
[postmaster]
[postmaster]
..
and several

/usr/bin/postgres ..... lines

The problem is that there are more [postmaster] lines (sometimes 4 or 5
times as many) as there are /usr/bin/postgres lines.

When I do a kill -TERM pid on all of the [postmaster] pids or restart the
postmaster, the system gets much faster.  The problem is I also cut of
"live" connections in the process.  My question is: Is there any way I can
determine which of the [postmaster] entries are associated with which
/usr/bin/postgres entries?

Thank you!

Len Morgan

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