Tom,
 
You're the man! 
 
I zeroed out the troubled pg_clog file and the db started up fine! Here's the 
link to the discussion, and a detailed explanation of the issue by Tom:
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/comp.databases.postgresql.hackers/browse_thread/thread/c97c853f640b9ac1/d6bc3c75eed6c2a4?q=could+not+access+status+of+transaction#d6bc3c75eed6c2a4
 
Tom, is the issue resolved after 7.4.1?
 
Thanks,
Anjan
 
 
-----Original Message----- 
From: Tom Lane [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Mon 2/21/2005 11:42 AM 
To: Anjan Dave 
Cc: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [ADMIN] pg_clog corrupt, can't start postgres 



        "Anjan Dave" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: 
        > The partition ran out of space from an import process. I cleared up 
the space and attempted to start the postgres service again, but it doesn't 
start and i get following in the message log.

        > PANIC:  could not access status of transaction 45514755 
        > DETAIL:  could not read from file "/var/lib/pgsql/data/pg_clog/002B" 
at offset 106496: Success 
        > LOG:  startup process (PID 23991) was terminated by signal 6 
        > LOG:  aborting startup due to startup process failure 

        > Postgres is 7.4.1 on this machine. 
          
        > I saw some previous posts on this subject and so far the solution 
seems to be initialize and restore databases from the dumps.

        Before that, try updating to 7.4.7 (or at least 7.4.2) --- this looks 
        like the same bug fixed here: 

        2004-01-26 14:16  tgl 

                * src/backend/access/transam/varsup.c (REL7_4_STABLE): Repair 
                incorrect order of operations in GetNewTransactionId().  We 
must 
                complete ExtendCLOG() before advancing nextXid, so that if that 
                routine fails, the next incoming transaction will try it again. 
                Per trouble report from Christopher Kings-Lynne. 

        You might also go back to the mail list archives from that time and see 
        what advice was given to Chris about getting out of the problem he 
found 
        himself in.  I *think* that something along the line of forcibly 
        appending a page of zeroes to that clog file might be the best 
solution, 
        but this was more than a year ago and I don't recall for sure. 

                                regards, tom lane 


---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 8: explain analyze is your friend

Reply via email to