Re: In or Exists?
От | John R Pierce |
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Тема | Re: In or Exists? |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 43F3744C.7060103@hogranch.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: In or Exists? (Scott Marlowe <smarlowe@g2switchworks.com>) |
Список | pgsql-jdbc |
> Oh, and update your OS as well if you can. RH 8.0 is also no longer > supported. It has many unpatched security bugs. You are running an > unreliable, unstable version of postgresql on an unreliable, insecure > platform. indeed. The 'proper' upgrade is a clean install of a up to date supported distribution, perhaps RHEL4 or CentOS4, or perhaps something else, however I also know how hard this can be on a production system. There is an alternative, the Fedora people have a 'fedora legacy' project which is still supporting RH9 with critical fixes, you can fairly easily update RH8 to RH9 (they are very similar systems), and then get the latest updates for this platform. This will give you some breathing room while you plan the major upgrade to RHEL4 or something else... I've done this on some production servers where there was lack of money or resources to setup a whole new server (these are servers that belong to 3rd parties for which noone is being paid to run, so there were no resources available for a proper upgrade). I would first dump backups of all your postgres databases(!!) Then I'd make backups of all your core file systems so you can revert if things backfire on you for unexplained reasons... then, follow these instructions... http://www.fedora.us/wiki/LegacyRPMUpgrade and then these... http://www.fedoralegacy.org/docs/yum-rh9.php then remove any and all traces of RH distributions of older postgres versions (`rpm -qa | grep postgres`, then rpm -e xxxx), install the latest postgres 8.1 from the RPMs on the postgres download pages, and recreate your postgres users, and restore your postgres dump, and you should be good to go.
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