Hi Peter,
On Mon, Dec 9, 2013 at 7:03 PM, Peter Kroon <plakroon@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi Dinesh,How and where?
>Get all the queries what it has performed.
When I run "select * from pg_stat_activity" I get the same result with and without "log_minduration_statement=0"
By setting this parameter log_min_duration_statement to 0, postgres will log all the queries, in the pg_log file.
Hope the following steps helps you on this, and make sure you have enabled the logging_collector.
1. Modify the above parameter on the required postgres cluster.
2. Do SELECT pg_reload_conf(); on the same machine.
3. And go to pg_log file location, and do tail -f current pg_log file.
4. Go to pgadmin, and refresh on any table.
5. Check the tail -f <pg_log>file output. There you will find all the sql queries, which have been executed from pgAdmin.
6. Collect those queries, and make your own custom function with pl/pgsql language.
Regards,
Dinesh
PeterCould you provide a more detailed step by step guide?Best,2013/12/9 Dinesh Kumar <dinesh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Hi,On Fri, Dec 6, 2013 at 4:34 PM, Peter Kroon <plakroon@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Thanks, but i need a non command line option.We can do this with a function which is having the sql queries of pgAdmin raised against the database.=> Log all the queries by enabling "log_minduration_statement=0".=> Do SELECT pg_reload_conf();=> Do a refresh on a table of pgAdmin's browser.=> Get all the queries what it has performed.=> Create a custom function with those queries.Regards,Dinesh2013/12/6 Ian Lawrence Barwick <barwick@xxxxxxxxx>
2013/12/6 Peter Kroon <plakroon@xxxxxxxxx>:
> When you click on a table in the "Object browser" you'll see in the "SQLYou can use the pg_dump command line function for this:
> pane" the sql that is needed to create that table.
>
> Which function can I call to get that SQL?
pg_dump -s -t name_of_table name_of_database
Regards
Ian Barwick