On 7 Jan 2003 at 10:29, Tom Lane wrote:

> "Dan Langille" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I am forwarding this on behalf of [EMAIL PROTECTED] who is at a client
> > site and cannot email.
> 
> > I did a search and found a mail stating that its possibly related to
> > a deleted user having ownership of the table.
> > "http://www.geocrawler.com/mail/msg.php3?msg_id=5653159&list=10"; I
> > checked and indeed the owner that created the table no longer
> > exists. Unfortunately I have no idea who that user was.
> 
> You don't need to know.  Get the old owner's sysid with
>  SELECT relowner FROM pg_class WHERE relname = 'busted_table';
> then create a user with the appropriate sysid:
>  CREATE USER foo WITH SYSID nnn;

I think that's pretty much what he did:

1.) psql dbname
2.) select * from pg_table; 

        this lists all th detaild of the tables in the DB.
        some might have owner set to "unknown (sysid=xx)" 
        this is the problem. (note the sysid number)

3.) createuser -i xx (sysid user of the unknown table owner)
4.) pg_dump / pg_dumpall 

> Once you've done that, consider upgrading to a more recent Postgres.
> It's been a good long while since pg_dump would choke on this
> situation.

FWIW, I think upgrade is the reason for the pg_dump.

-- 
Dan Langille : http://www.langille.org/


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