README not needed anymore.

This commit is contained in:
Bruce Momjian 2000-02-16 21:26:00 +00:00
parent bf566b202e
commit a52692213c
3 changed files with 6 additions and 80 deletions

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@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
#
#
# IDENTIFICATION
# $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/src/bin/initdb/Makefile,v 1.16 2000/01/15 18:30:31 petere Exp $
# $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/src/bin/initdb/Makefile,v 1.17 2000/02/16 21:25:59 momjian Exp $
#
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------
@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ initdb: initdb.sh
sed -e 's/__MULTIBYTE__/$(MULTIBYTE)/g' < initdb.sh > initdb
install: initdb
$(INSTALL) $(INSTL_EXE_OPTS) $+ $(BINDIR)
$(INSTALL) $(INSTL_EXE_OPTS) $+ $(BINDIR)/$+
clean:
rm -f initdb

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@ -26,7 +26,7 @@
#
#
# IDENTIFICATION
# $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/src/bin/initdb/Attic/initdb.sh,v 1.85 2000/02/09 00:21:49 petere Exp $
# $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/src/bin/initdb/Attic/initdb.sh,v 1.86 2000/02/16 21:25:59 momjian Exp $
#
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------
@ -605,10 +605,9 @@ echo "VACUUM ANALYZE" \
| "$PGPATH"/postgres $PGSQL_OPT template1 > /dev/null || exit_nicely
echo
echo "$CMDNAME completed successfully. You can now start the database server."
echo " $PGPATH/postmaster -D $PGDATA"
echo "or"
echo " $PGPATH/pg_ctl -D $PGDATA start"
echo "Success. You can now start the database server using"
echo "$PGPATH/postmaster -D $PGDATA or"
echo "$PGPATH/pg_ctl -D $PGDATA start"
echo
exit 0

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@ -1,73 +0,0 @@
pg_dump is a utility for dumping out a postgres database into a script
file containing query commands. The script files are in a ASCII
format and can be used to reconstruct the database, even on other
machines and other architectures. pg_dump will produce the queries
necessary to re-generate all user-defined types, functions, tables,
indices, aggregates, and operators. In addition, all the data is
copied out in ASCII format so that it can be readily copied in again.
To build:
% gmake clean install
This version of the program will read in your postgreSQL database and
output the schema and the data tuples in SQL. The dumps are useful
for moving from one postgreSQL installation to another.
How to use pg_dump:
-------------------
The command line options are fairly self explanatory. Use -help to
see the command line options. recommend using -v to get
more verbose descriptions of what pg_dump is doing.
After running pg_dump, one should examine the output script file for any
warnings, especially in light of the limitations listed below.
A typical use of pg_dump:
% pg_dump -v -f oldDB.dump oldDB
% createdb newDB
% psql newDB < oldDB.dump
Caveats and limitations:
------------------------
pg_dump has a few limitations. The limitations mostly stem from
difficulty in extracting certain meta-information from the system
catalogs.
rules and views:
pg_dump does not understand user-defined rules and views and
will fail to dump them properly. (This is due to the fact that
rules are stored as plans in the catalogs and not textually)
partial indices:
pg_dump does not understand partial indices. (The reason is
the same as above. Partial index predicates are stored as plans)
large objects:
pg_dump does not handle large objects. Large
objects are ignored and must be dealt with manually.
oid preservation:
pg_dump does not preserve oid's while dumping. If you have
stored oid's explicitly in tables in user-defined attributes,
and are using them as keys, then the output scripts will not
regenerate your database correctly.
pg_dump requires postgres95 beta0.03 or later.
Bug-reporting
--------------
If you should find a problem with pg_dump, it is very important that
you provide a (small) sample database which illustrates the problem.
Please send bugs, questions, and feedback to the
postgres95@postgres95.vnet.net