Tom Lane wrote: 
 > [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: 
 >>  Thus, when piping the output (from legacy host 192.168.2.2) to 
 >> populate  the newly initialized cluster, by way of running (on
the new 
 >> host  192.168.2.3) 
 >>      pg_dumpall -h 192.168.2.2|psql 
 >>  an error occurs in that first section when the script attempts
to 
 >> set a  role-specific search path ... because the schema named in
the 
 >> search  path hasn't been created yet. 
 > 
 > Could we see a complete example? 
 > 
 > Recent versions of the backend are not supposed to throw hard
errors in 
 > this situation, because of exactly that hazard.  For instance: 
 > 
 > regression=# create role joe; 
 > CREATE ROLE 
 > regression=# alter role joe set search_path to foo, bar; 
 > NOTICE:  schema "foo" does not exist 
 > NOTICE:  schema "bar" does not exist 
 > ALTER ROLE 
 > regression=# 
 > 
 > which AFAICS is exactly what will happen while restoring a
pg_dumpall 
 > dump. 
 Ah, I understand. I think. 
 What I saw was not literally and "error", but rather a "notice": 
The  "alter role ... set search_path" statement doesn't actually fail.

 The real problem is my preconceived notion. I was thinking in terms
of,  say,  the analogous situation for a database insert to a table
with a foreign key, i.e., that since  the schema to be set doesn't
exist, the the statement should actually fail. 
 The implication of your illustration above is that the "alter role
...  set search_path" statement completes successfully even though it
is  setting an invalid search path (invalid because the schema
referenced in  the search path to be set does not exist at the time
the statement is  executed). 
 So this behavior, which seems a little counter intuitive, actually
makes  for a robust end result. 

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