On 12/19/2013 01:50 PM, Joseph Kregloh wrote:
On Thu, Dec 19, 2013 at 4:14 PM, John R Pierce <pie...@hogranch.com
<mailto:pie...@hogranch.com>> wrote:
On 12/19/2013 1:06 PM, Joseph Kregloh wrote:
It's easier to keep things segregated. It is not anymore
different than doing the upgrade in the same jail. Which at the
end of the day you are doing the upgrade in the same jail,
because at the end of the day pg_upgrade just needs the old data
an binary to start and create some dump files.
pg_upgrade needs to access the old data AND all the tablespaces at
the same paths as the old server sees them AND the new data and
tablespaces at the same path as the NEW server sees them. if the
two servers are in different jails, I don't see how you could make
that work... if you run pg_upgrade in the host system, then all the
paths are different for both sets of data and tablespaces.
I understand that it will need to access the old data and new data data
as it sees it, but it is seeing everything as /usr/local/pgsql/data. Now
lets say I have both versions 9.0 and 9.3 installed in the same jail.
They will both need to use /usr/local/pgsql/data to access the physical
data. But that will not work because all of the Postgres related files
are in there, so you can only have 9.0 OR 9.3 use the
/usr/local/pgsql/data directory.
No, that is not the case. The data directory can be different for
different instances, it is a configure option. In fact the pg_upgrade
docs point that out:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.3/interactive/pgupgrade.html
See:
Usage
Steps 1-3
--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@gmail.com
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