It been suggested that I download the binary and just go from there.
All the documentation I've read says that for Unix installations
should compile source. Would using the binary allow me to do the
customization my site requires. I want to put the database in it's
original location so that faculty won't have to change they're
instructions to students.
Carol
PS Again, My OS is Solaris 10.
On Aug 14, 2008, at 5:21 PM, Reed Loefgren wrote:
Carol Walter wrote:
I'm running Solaris 10. I'm not sure whether I'd compile source
or use package manager. I haven't done enough research to know
which one is right for us. I will be migrating my old data into
the new version. I don't have any client apps that need testing -
yet. In fact, I don't have any client applications. I'm in an
academic environment. The databases I have on this server are
largely student creations. There are two faculty research
projects that are using this but one of them is closed down for
now, and they other is one that I'm rewriting from ColdFusion to
PHP, and it hasn't really started yet. That's part of my reason
for wanting to do this now. We are between the last summer
session and the start of the fall semester. This upgrade will
effect very few people at this time. I just really want to put
this back where the earlier one was, if I can. The faculty have
syllabi that have paths and links in them that will confuse the
students if things aren't where they expect.
Carol
On Aug 14, 2008, at 3:34 PM, Steve Crawford wrote:
Carol Walter wrote:
Hello,
I want to do a new installation of postgres. I have version
8.2.3 and I want to go to 8.3.3. The postgres documentation
says that the default location for the installation is /usr/
local/pgsql. My installation has obviously been customized
because I have no such path on my system. The documentation
also says you can customize the location by including prefix = */
PREFIX/* in the ./configuration file. Is there a way I can tell
what this customization was? There are several directories that
contain many of the same files. I have several installations of
postgres running on different servers. If this is anything like
everything else I've seen there, quite possibly, is a different
customization for each server.
Thank you very much,
Carol Walter
What OS?
How do you plan to install (source?, package-manager?)
Do you need to save data from old installation?
Do you have any client applications that need testing (or is this
to test them)? There are a few changes that could bite you
(changes to automatic casting and changed cluster syntax to name
a couple).
Cheers,
Steve
Carol,
I have never run Solaris, but you can probably find a pre-compiled
package of 8.3.3, and instructions on installing, over at
www.blastwave.com (.org?) They support opensolaris but might be
what you need anyway. That would cover the Solaris part, for the
postgresql part you'll need to look to the mailing lists or on usenet.
Good luck,
r