I'm not sure which version it is. It doesn't really say anywhere,
and the device itself is a limited 'ios' shell. Of course, I could
boot off of another linux cdrom and mount the filesystems, but i
have concerns about loosing support if I do that. It probably
wouldn't happen, but I'm paranoid, especially when I may have
support needs for putting it into production. :)
For what it's worth, the Apache version is 1.3.27, which is fairly
current, so I wouldn't be suprised if it's in the 7.3 strain.
Here's some of the postmaster log, though. I don't know if it'd help
anyone figure out which version it is:
2003-09-29 16:25:16 [1331] DEBUG: database system was interrupted
at 2003-09-29 16:02:07 UTC
2003-09-29 16:25:16 [1331] DEBUG: checkpoint record is at
0/10F7F4
2003-09-29 16:25:16 [1331] DEBUG: redo record is at 0/10F7F4;
undo record is at 0/0; shutdown TRUE
2003-09-29 16:25:16 [1331] DEBUG: next transaction id: 91; next
oid: 16557
2003-09-29 16:25:16 [1331] DEBUG: database system was not
properly shut down; automatic recovery in progress
2003-09-29 16:25:16 [1331] DEBUG: redo starts at 0/10F834
2003-09-29 16:25:17 [1331] DEBUG: ReadRecord: record with zero
length at 0/185D8C
2003-09-29 16:25:17 [1331] DEBUG: redo done at 0/185D68
2003-09-29 16:25:19 [1331] DEBUG: database system is ready
On Fri, Oct 17, 2003 at 08:44:53AM -0400, Robert Treat wrote:
> Yep, we noticed this a few years back. I think someone was googling for
> postgresql and ran across a bunch of mentions in their on-line
> documentation. Out of curiosity, what version were they running?
>
> Robert Treat
>
> On Thu, 2003-10-16 at 20:28, Tim Conrad wrote:
> > Not exactly sure if this is worthwhile pointing out, or if someone
> > already has, but I got a couple of Cisco 7305 Content Engines the
> > other day. Today, I was working on configuring them, and noticed
> > that they're running Linux as an os with Postgres on it. Not quite
> > sure what it's used for, other than probably for configuration info.
> >
> > It's just nice to be able to say, hey, xyz uses Postgres, so should
> > you. :)
> >
> > Tim