Simon Riggs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Fri, 2004-05-14 at 02:00, Tom Lane wrote:
>> Okay, you have a page with an LSN of A971020 which is past end of XLOG
>> (550). You may have created this problem for yourself by doing
>> pg_resetxlog with poorly chosen parameters.
> Is there a way t
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> > > pg_dump: ERROR: XLogFlush: request 0/A971020 is not satisfied ---
> > > flushed only to 0/550 ... lost synchronization with
> server, resetting
> > > connection
> >
> > Okay, you have a page with an LSN of A971020 which is past e
On Fri, 2004-05-14 at 02:00, Tom Lane wrote:
> Michael Brusser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > It looks that "No such file or directory" followed by the abort signal
> > resulted from manually removing logs. pg_resetxlog took care of this,
> > but other problems persisted.
>
> > pg_dump: ERROR: X
Michael Brusser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It looks that "No such file or directory" followed by the abort signal
> resulted from manually removing logs. pg_resetxlog took care of this,
> but other problems persisted.
> pg_dump: ERROR: XLogFlush: request 0/A971020 is not satisfied ---
> flus
It looks that "No such file or directory" followed by the abort signal
resulted from manually removing logs. pg_resetxlog took care of this,
but other problems persisted.
I got a copy of the database and installed it on the local partition.
It does seem badly corrupted, these are some hard errors.
Michael Brusser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I wonder if message
> "open of /mnt_c1t2d0s0/... (log file 0, segment 1) failed: No such file or
> directory"
> may indicate some kind of NFS problem.
Running a database over NFS is widely considered a horrid idea --- the
NFS protocol is simply too pro