On 07/27/2015 12:36 PM, JotaComm wrote:

​Hello,

I have the following inconsistency in my environment:

postgres@postgres =# SELECT current_timestamp;
               now
-------------------------------
*2015-07-27 16:26:40.001694-03*
(1 row)

postgres@postgres =# SHOW timezone;
   TimeZone
-------------
  Brazil/East
(1 row)

postgres@postgres =# SELECT blah;
ERROR:  column "blah" does not exist

In my log file:

[*2015-07-27 19:27:10.944 GMT*] 3397 <postgres postgres [local] 42703>
ERROR:  column "blah" does not exist at character 8
[*2015-07-27 19:27:10.944 GMT*] 3397 <postgres postgres [local] 42703>
STATEMENT:  SELECT blah;​

My PostgreSQL version is:  9.2.4

cat /etc/issue
CentOS release 6.3 (Final)
Kernel \r on an \m

Could you help me?

http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.2/interactive/runtime-config-logging.html

log_timezone (string)

Sets the time zone used for timestamps written in the server log. Unlike TimeZone, this value is cluster-wide, so that all sessions will report timestamps consistently. The built-in default is GMT, but that is typically overridden in postgresql.conf; initdb will install a setting there corresponding to its system environment. See Section 8.5.3 for more information. This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf file or on the server command line.


Thanks a lot.

Best regards


--
JotaComm
http://jotacomm.wordpress.com


--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@aklaver.com


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