Re: pg_restore ERROR: permission denied to change default privileges
От | Adrian Klaver |
---|---|
Тема | Re: pg_restore ERROR: permission denied to change default privileges |
Дата | |
Msg-id | c3e27dc2-343d-48dd-bf05-a1404e6939ec@aklaver.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: pg_restore ERROR: permission denied to change default privileges (Rachel Roch <rroch@tutanota.de>) |
Список | pgsql-general |
On 6/14/25 01:42, Rachel Roch wrote: > > > > 13 Jun 2025, 20:13 by adrian.klaver@aklaver.com: > >> >> To get at an editable script you can do something like: >> >> pg_restore -f my_database_txt.sql my_database.dump >> >> This will give you a plain text version of the dump that you can feed back to psql to load into remote database. >> > > Thanks Adrian ! > > I had thought maybe maybe I could do a "pg_restore -l my_database.dump" and ignore the relevant line using whatever theother flag is, but sadly there doesn't appear to be enough flexibility, i.e. > > pg_restore -l my_database.dump | fgrep -F postgres > gives: > 2067; 826 16607 DEFAULT ACL public DEFAULT PRIVILEGES FOR TABLES postgres > > But > > pg_restore -l my_database.dump | fgrep -F my_database_ro > gives nothing. :( That is because the lines returned from pg_restore -l are not the full commands, they represent(generally) a summary of the object, its name and the owner. The error message and your first example above show that the command is there. See at here: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/app-pgrestore.html in the Examples section how you can comment out the line. Then you could use -L to feed the list back to pg_restore. Isn't fgrep -F redundant? As I understand it fgrep = grep -F > > So either your solution or Tom's "just ignore it" sound like they'll work. -- Adrian Klaver adrian.klaver@aklaver.com
В списке pgsql-general по дате отправления: