On Mon, Jan 08, 2007 at 09:22:05 +0100, Andy Dale <andy.dale@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi, > > Sorry for the slight delay in my response. > > I am using 3 PostgreSQL databases and writing to them using an SQL proxy. > These databases have a high write volume. On rebooting all 3 servers for > OS/Software updates, i would like to figure out which was the last written > to DB (this is assuming the DB/Servers are not all taken down at the same > time), the times are kept in sync with NTP. > > I imagine it is possible to get this behaviour with after triggers, but this > means i have to attach the same trigger to each table ?? I think what Scott was suggesting was that you tell us what you are planning to do with the time. Depending on what you are trying to do, there may be better ways of doing things. Also the time of last update for an MVCC is a bit nebulous and to get it in the database might not be possible with the semantics you want. For example getting the time a transaction is committed is going to be hard without modifying the backend, as any triggers will run before a transaction is committed and can't know the precise time of the commit. > > Thanks, > > Andy > > On 04/01/07, Scott Marlowe <smarlowe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >On Thu, 2007-01-04 at 11:11, Andy Dale wrote: > >> Hi, > >> > >> I need to be able to determine the last time (and date) that a > >> database was written to. I know it could be possible just to check > >> the last modified dates in the PGDATA directory, but i need to compare > >> the last write time of 3 databases (connecting via JDBC). Hopefully > >> the last write date is contained somewhere in a system table > >> (information schema) but i have no idea of the table(s) i would need > >> to query. > > > >Bad news, it's not generally stored. > > > >Good news, it's not that hard to implement. > > > >Perhaps if you give us the bigger picture we can make more logical > >suggestions on how to accomplish it. > >