Hi! > -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- > Von: Bruce Momjian [mailto:pgman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] > Gesendet: Dienstag, 15. November 2005 19:46 > An: Markus Wollny > Cc: pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Betreff: Re: invalid UTF-8 byte sequence detected > > > I am also confused how invalid UTF8 sequences got into your database. > It shouldn't have been possible. > Our databases were originally encoded in ASCII, though they should have been LATIN9 - or UNICODE; this has been remedied a long time ago using iconv on the dumps; our PostgreSQL-version then was 7.4 and we converted databases and dumps to UTF-8. Maybe the invalid byte sequences have been entered sometimes during our migration from ODBC to JDBC while our encoding was still a mess - though I would have thought that this should have been resolved by dump&iconv&restore then. However, I do suspect that the cause of the issue was really more or less a bug in PostgreSQL <8.1, which accepted certain illegal byte sequences. I our case, I found that the re-import of the dump errored out on ISO-8859-1 encoded backticks (´) - certain mournfully misled individuals do use this "degu"-character instead of the apostrophe even tough it's more difficult to type on a german keyboard layout. And quite wrong, too. Anyway, I found some reference in the hackers-list that encoding-consistency for Unicode has been tightened down (see http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2005-10/msg00972.php ). Both a solution and a suggestion have been posted in this thread; Christopher Kings-Lynne has suggested to include a reference to this issue in the 'upgrading/back compatibiliy' section for these release notes - I do strongly second his suggestion :) The suggested solution was to feed the plain dump again through iconv; however at least on my systems (Debian Sarge) iconv didn't like my >5GB sized dump files. So in order to successfully reimport the dumps, I had to "split --line-bytes=650m" the SQL-file, pass the parts through iconv -c -f UTF8 -t UTF8 and concatenate them back into one file again. There were no more errors on feeding the dump back into psql and I didn't come across any missing data during my tests, so this has definitely done the trick for me. As 8.1 has tightened down encoding-consistency for Unicode, I believe that the databases should be safe from any illegal byte-sequences in text-fields from now on. Kind regards Markus ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: explain analyze is your friend