> Jeff Hoffmann writes:
>
> > not to be pedantic, but just to make sure, i looked in the 7.0 docs and
> > it says it plain as day on the "alternate locations" section from the
> > admin guide, second paragraph "This
> > environment variable must have been defined before the backend was
> > starte
> Jeff Hoffmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > not to be pedantic, but just to make sure, i looked in the 7.0 docs and
> > it says it plain as day on the "alternate locations" section from the
> > admin guide, second paragraph "This
> > environment variable must have been defined before the backe
Applied, and new files added.
> Peter Mount <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> >
> > Anything of this nature always does.
> >
>
> Okay, I have some new code in place that hopefully should work better. I
> couldn't produce a full patch using cvs diff -c this time since I have
> created new files
I am just trying to connect locally. Only one machine involved. Is
there a way to tell what port the postmaster is running on if it is
running at all.
Collin
On Sun, 8 Oct 2000 10:55:32 +0200, Jarmo Paavilainen said:
>
>
> > I'm having problems starting postgres. What happens is
>
er, this is probably a very stupid question: the /pub/dev/ folder on the
postgres ftp server contains both postgresql-snapshot and
postgresql.snapshot files, which seem nearly identical, except they
unpack as postgresql-snapshot/ or pgsql/, respectively, and the size is
slightly different. what is
on 10/8/00 1:32 PM, Frank Joerdens at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> At a guess, I would say that you are probably missing an .rpm for the
>> postgres-client or pgsql-client, but that is based on my view dealings with
>> Red Hat.
>
> Yep. That's what it sounds like.
I had downloaded and installed
> For a production machine, I typically build and install my entire
> "mission-critical" chain of apps. Postgres, PHP, Apache, etc. This helps
> avoid a few problems: Red Hat may suddenly upgrade to a newly incompatible
> version, or may just change a configuration.
I agree. I'd also compile P
On Sun, Oct 08, 2000 at 12:07:00PM -0400, John Tsombakos wrote:
> on 10/8/00 2:56 AM, Frank Joerdens at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> No, I installed PostgreSQL and PHP with the RPM's, and I believe Apache was
> already installed when I installed Redhat.
>
> Please note that PHP _does_ work. I ca
on 10/8/00 2:56 AM, Frank Joerdens at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> How did you install PHP & Apache? Did you configure & compile the
> sources or get the rpm's from somewhere? If you're compiling PHP from
> the sources, you need to configure PHP with the --with-pgsql switch. You
> can check whether
one thing you could try is to compile php. I've found in the past that even
thoughthe rmp version of php is great, most of the time it doesn't work.
- Original Message -
From: "John Tsombakos" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, October 07, 2000 10:20 PM
Subject:
...
> I'm having problems starting postgres.What happens is
> that I start it but then it says it isn't running.
...
> DEBUG:Data Base System is starting up at Sat Oct 7 13:13:29 2000
> DEBUG:Data Base System was shut down at Sat Oct 7 13:13:25 2000
> DEBUG:Data
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