Can you elaborate a bit more on what you mean by pg_class, as looking at it i cannot figure out how to get the last write time from the pg_class table.
Cheers,
Andy
On 08/01/07, Erik Jones <erik@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Scott Marlowe wrote:
> On Mon, 2007-01-08 at 03:26, Andy Dale wrote:
>
>> Ok.
>>
>> The SQL Proxy i am using (HA-JDBC) has some limitations with regard to
>> getting it's "cluster" back into sync. If ha-jdbc uses the wrong DB
>> (one that has been out of action for a while) as the starting point
>> for the cluster it will then try and delete stuff from the other DB's
>> on their introduction to the cluster.
>>
>> I thought the easiest way to control a complete "cluster" restart
>> would be to extract the last write date and introduce the one with the
>> last write date first, this will make certain the above scenario does
>> not happen.
>>
>
> Sorry, I hadn't seen this post when I wrote my lost one.
>
> Yeah, I think having a timestamp column with a rule so it has the
> current timestamp when written to and then selecting for the max in each
> table would work out. You could probably get fancier, but I'm guessing
> that cluster startup is a pretty rare thing, so it's probably easier to
> write a script that selects all the tablenames from pg_tables (???)
pg_class
--
erik jones <erik@xxxxxxxxxx>
software development
emma(r)