Hi M Sarwar,
If you have some dumps of the database in near past, then you may analyze those and note till what time view was in original state (May be narrowing down on things)
As some geek said above, this incident can serve as a lesson learnt and, for future you can configure pgAudit to capture all DDLs or set a log level that captures ddls e.g. log_statement = ddl
Regards,
Muhammad Ikram
Bitnine
On Fri, Jun 7, 2024 at 6:01 PM Rui DeSousa <rui.desousa@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Jun 6, 2024, at 11:44 PM, M Sarwar <sarwarmd02@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:Hi Tom,I do not have DDL logs.Are you saying that I should have manually maintain it or are you referring to any existing logs on the database side?This is taken very seriously by our architect. This guy behaves like everything like auditor, Project Manager or whatever we can think of. 🙂Thanks,SarwarA simple solution I used was to do a schema only dump daily and check in any changes into a git repo via a cronjob Then the repo will track schema changes.
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Muhammad Ikram