Yikes, guess that shows just what a beginner I am with it! Thanks for the tip
Chris ________________________________ From: Garren Smith <[email protected]> To: [email protected]; Chris Ashton <[email protected]> Cc: Tim Tisdall <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, 21 March 2014, 13:53 Subject: Re: Corrupt database file Hi Chris, If you have Couchbase, that is different to Couchdb. Its better to ask on the Couchbase mailing list. They might be able to help you there. Cheers Garren On 21 Mar 2014, at 3:34 PM, Chris Ashton <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Tim > > Many thanks for this reply. I have tried this dump method but even that > fails, complaining about the database file : "curl: (56) Problem (2) in the > Chunked-Encoded data" > > Our files are huge so everything takes ages. > > The only other thought I have right now is to process this enormous text > file, add whatever curly braces and the like are required to turn it back > into valid JSON and then, as you suggest, rewrite it into the database in > some way. > > I'm just surprised there is no utility to fix bad data sections, it's a real > pity. > > > By the way, I probably should have mentioned, we appear to have couchbase > single version 1.2.0 > > Thanks again > > Chris > > > > ________________________________ > From: Tim Tisdall <[email protected]> > To: [email protected]; Chris Ashton <[email protected]> > Sent: Friday, 21 March 2014, 13:19 > Subject: Re: Corrupt database file > > > > I don't think there's any tool for fixing corrupted db files... What I'd try > doing is dumping all the content from the DB and reconstructing it. You can > fetch everything in the database by downloading > http://127.0.0.1:5984/my_database/_all_docs?include_docs=true (where the IP > and domain is your server, and 'my_database' is your DB). You'd then need to > write some sort of script to read that JSON document and then write the > values back into a _new_ database. > > Does anyone know if there's a way to do this same sort of thing with > replication? (I have to do it the other way because I don't have enough > space for 2 copies of my DB on my system) > > > > > On 21 March 2014 07:46, Chris Ashton <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hi >> >> I am a novice with CouchDB and really struggling to support a product that >> someone developed before leaving the company. No one else has any skills in >> Couch so I'm trying to pick up the pieces. >> >> Our database has stopped responding and we've tried compacting but to no >> avail. >> >> We are getting errors like the following in the log file, which I presume >> mean that we have a corrupt db file for one reason or another: >> >> >> [Fri, 21 Mar 2014 10:06:56 GMT] [error] [<0.213.0>] ** Generic server >> <0.213.0> terminating >> ** Last message in was {'EXIT',<0.217.0>, >> {file_corruption,<<"file corruption">>}} >> >> I was wondering if there was a utility which would scan DB files and remove >> badly formed parts or anything like that? We are running on Windows. >> >> Many thanks >> >> Chris
