Murthy Nunna <mnunna@xxxxxxxx> writes: > Jerry, > > OMG, I think you nailed this... I know what I did. I cut/pasted the > command from an e-mail... I have seen this issue before with stuff not Oh! I suggest you lose that habit ASAP before ever issuing another command to anything :-) > related to postgres. But then those commands failed in syntax error > and then you know what you did wrong. > > Similarly, I expect pg_upgrade to throw an error if it finds something it doesn't understand instead of ignoring and causing damage. Don't you agree? Well, pg_upgrade might never have seen your $silly-dash since possibly your shell or terminal driver swallowed it. > > Thanks for pointing that out. I will redo my upgrade. > > -r -v -k -c --- good flags no utf8 > -r -v -k –c --- bad flags.... > > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Jerry Sievers [mailto:gsievers19@xxxxxxxxxxx] > Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2018 6:24 PM > To: Murthy Nunna <mnunna@xxxxxxxx> > Cc: Adrian Klaver <adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx>; pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; pgsql-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; pgsql-performance@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: pg_upgrade 10.2 > > Murthy Nunna <mnunna@xxxxxxxx> writes: > >> Hi Adrian, >> >> Port numbers are correct. >> >> I moved the position of -c (-p 5433 -P 5434 -c -r -v). Now it is NOT complaining about old cluster running. However, I am running into a different problem. > > I noted in your earlier message the final -c... the dash was not a regular 7bit ascii char but some UTF or whatever dash char. > > I wonder if that's what you fed your shell and it caused a silent parsing issue, eg the -c dropped. > > But of course email clients wrap and mangle text like that all sorts of fun ways so lordy knows just what you originally sent :-) > > FWIW > > >> >> New cluster database "ifb_prd_last" is not empty Failure, exiting >> >> Note: ifb_prd_last is not new cluster. It is actually old cluster. >> >> Is this possibly because in one of my earlier attempts where I >> shutdown old cluster and ran pg_upgrade with -c at the end of the >> command line. I think -c was ignored and my cluster has been upgraded >> in that attempt. Is that possible? >> >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Adrian Klaver [mailto:adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx] >> Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2018 4:35 PM >> To: Murthy Nunna <mnunna@xxxxxxxx>; >> pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; pgsql-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; >> pgsql-performance@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >> Subject: Re: pg_upgrade 10.2 >> >> On 06/12/2018 02:18 PM, Murthy Nunna wrote: >>> pg_upgrade -V >>> pg_upgrade (PostgreSQL) 10.4 >>> >>> pg_upgrade -b /fnal/ups/prd/postgres/v9_3_14_x64/Linux-2-6/bin -B >>> /fnal/ups/prd/postgres/v10_4_x64/Linux-2-6/bin -d >>> /data0/pgdata/ifb_prd_last -D /data0/pgdata/ifb_prd_last_104 -p 5433 >>> -P 5434 -r -v –c >>> >>> >> >> Looks good to me. The only thing that stands out is that in your original post you had: >> >> -p 5432 >> >> and above you have: >> >> -p 5433 >> >> Not sure if that makes a difference. >> >> The only suggestion I have at the moment is to move -c from the end of the line to somewhere earlier on the chance that there is a bug that is not finding it when it's at the end. >> >> >> -- >> Adrian Klaver >> adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx > > -- > Jerry Sievers > Postgres DBA/Development Consulting > e: postgres.consulting@xxxxxxxxxxx > p: 312.241.7800 -- Jerry Sievers Postgres DBA/Development Consulting e: postgres.consulting@xxxxxxxxxxx p: 312.241.7800