On Aug 27, 2007, at 7:57 PM, Kamil Srot wrote:

Tom Lane wrote:
Kamil Srot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Erik Jones wrote:
Have you verified that the table's files are still on disk after it's "disappeared"?
Do not have any idea how to do it... I wasn't able to access it using any DML/DDL commands... can try it on a binary backup of the damaged DB if you'll guide me...
Make a note now of the table's "relfilenode" value (it'll be different in each database), and confirm that you see it in the filesystem. After the next disappearance, see if anything's still there. For background read http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.2/ static/storage.html
OK, I have the filenames noted and I do confirm, they all does exist now under the base in the pgsql tree...
Note that certain operations like TRUNCATE and CLUSTER change the relfilenode, so if you're using any of those then it might get harder to track where the file is.
There is not any manipulation with the structure of the DB, so it'll stay the same...

Thank you!

Also, I'd write a simple "ping" script to check for the table that runs every 5 seconds or so. Have it, at the very least, write out the timestamp of when the table disappears into a file. Better yet would be for it to send you an alert so you can check it out right away. With that *when* you'll know *where* in your logs to look to see what happened at that time.

Erik Jones

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