A quick note, anytime you're gonna upgrade, you need to first shut down 
the postmaster...  

On Mon, 27 Oct 2003, scott.marlowe wrote:

> Assuming you'll be upgrading from 7.2 to 7.2.4, then yes, all you need to 
> do is upgrage the rpms.  you can do tham all at once, assuming they're in 
> the same directory and named postgresql-something or other:
> 
> rpm -Uvh postgresql*
> 
> should do it.
> 
> If you want to upgrade to 7.3.4, then you'll need to do a pg_dumpall first 
> and save the output of that file like so:
> 
> pg_dumpall >mydata.sql
> 
> so you can restore it.  Then, after installing 7.3.4, you'll need to set 
> up a data directory and restore there.  If you've got the space, do that 
> somewhere other than the old 7.2.x data directory, as you may have some 
> issues and need to go back to 7.2.x and tweak the backup procedure etc...
> 
> On 27 Oct 2003, kbd wrote:
> 
> > i will take the advice and upgrade to 7.2.4 ASAP as in now.
> > 
> > this what rpm reports on the server currently:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] root]# rpm -qa | grep postgres
> > postgresql-jdbc-7.2.1-5
> > postgresql-libs-7.2.1-5
> > postgresql-7.2.1-5
> > postgresql-server-7.2.1-5
> > postgresql-contrib-7.2.1-5
> > postgresql-devel-7.2.1-5
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] root]#
> > 
> > i downloaded the following:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] download]# ls
> > postgresql-7.2.4-1PGDG.i386.rpm          postgresql-libs-7.2.4-1PGDG.i386.rpm
> > postgresql-contrib-7.2.4-1PGDG.i386.rpm  postgresql-perl-7.2.4-1PGDG.i386.rpm
> > postgresql-devel-7.2.4-1PGDG.i386.rpm    postgresql-server-7.2.4-1PGDG.i386.rpm
> > postgresql-docs-7.2.4-1PGDG.i386.rpm     postgresql-tcl-7.2.4-1PGDG.i386.rpm
> > postgresql-jdbc-7.2.4-1PGDG.i386.rpm
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] download]#
> > 
> > 
> > i have done new installs using RPMs, but not an upgrade.
> > silly question time:  
> > are these the correct RPMs?
> > do I just upgrade them one at a time as follows:
> >   rpm -Uvh  postgresql.......rpm
> > 
> > 
> > many thanks 
> > 
> > kd
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] ("scott.marlowe") wrote in message news:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> > > On Fri, 24 Oct 2003, Duffy House wrote:
> > > 
> > > > Hello:
> > > > 
> > > > It looks like I got caught sleeping.
> > > > 
> > > > I am running Postgresql 7.2 under Red Hat 7.3.
> > > > Postgresql failed today.  When I tried to restart it, I got a message
> > > > stating that the device is full.
> > > > I used df to confirm that /var where postgres reside is full.  /var is on a
> > > > 4 Gig device.
> > > > Postgresql is the only application on this machine.
> > > > 
> > > > Please note, the backup of the database from the prior day, is 45 Meg
> > > > zipped.
> > > > I do not know how the database could be soaking up a 4 Gig device.
> > > > 
> > > > Questions:
> > > > 
> > > > How can I recover from this situation?
> > > > 
> > > > If postgres will not start how can I restore the database from the prior
> > > > day?
> > > > 
> > > > When I run a backup does postgres truncate its logs?
> > > > 
> > > > please keep it simple, I have about 1 hours admin experience with postgres.
> > > > 
> > > > thanks in advance.
> > > 
> > > It sounds like either you've never run vacuum, or you've had a few threads 
> > > holding transactions open for a very long time.
> > > 
> > > Easiest way to recover:  Make a bigger partition, cp everything there, and 
> > > point the postmaster at that partition to startup.  Then vacuum etc... and 
> > > copy it all back over the original partition.  Then make sure you're 
> > > running the latest and greatest (at least 7.2.4, prefereable 7.3.4) and 
> > > look up the autovacuum daemon to make sure this never happens again.  If 
> > > you installed from source, it's in the contrib/pg_autovacuum directory, 
> > > just cd in there as root, and 'make;make install' and it's installed.
> > > 
> > > 
> > > 
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