On Sat, Jun 22, 2013 at 2:49 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
--
Chris
Tony Dare <wadedare4703@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes:You should complain about that to the Ubuntu packager (ie, file an
> I don't know if anyone else has had this problem but i found that the
> /etc/init.d/postgresql script simply would not start up my databases
> after a reboot. though it worked fine just after creating the database
> and getting all the config files in the expected places. Was able to
> down and up the dbs all day long, if I wished. Then I rebooted and there
> was no databases started. Executing /etc/init.d/postgresql start 9.2
> resulted in "No database clusters on the system" or suchlike.
> I tracked the problem down to the script calling on pg_lsclusters, which
> in turn looks for a /var/run/postgresql directory. All well and good,
> except that /var/run/postgresql is on a tempfs filesystem and is wiped
> out after a reboot. (Q: should that even be on a tempfs?)
Ubuntu bug). It's unlikely that that person reads this list ...
I'm not sure even that's appropriate. The version of PostgreSQL that comes with Ubuntu 12.04, is 9.1, not 9.2 (there's an option for 8.3). Either the original poster has made a typo in his post, or he's installed PostgreSQL either by hand or from an unofficial package repository.
I have been using PostgreSQL 9.1 for months under Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, as installed from the Ubuntu repositories, without any issue whatsoever.
--
Chris
"If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the Universe." -- Carl Sagan