Обсуждение: pg_upgrade error regarding hstore operator
I am attempting to upgrade my organization's database cluster from 9.1.19 to 9.5.1 using the pg_upgrade utility. After someprocessing, the tool bails out with the following error in the log: pg_restore: creating OPERATOR "public.=>" pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error while PROCESSING TOC: pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error from TOC entry 5660; 2617 5655672 OPERATOR => postgres pg_restore: [archiver (db)] could not execute query: ERROR: syntax error at or near "=>" LINE 1: CREATE OPERATOR => ( ^ Command was: CREATE OPERATOR => ( PROCEDURE = "hstore", LEFTARG = "text", RIGHTARG = "text" ); -- For binary upgrade, handle... I tried dropping the operator before doing the upgrade but it's dependent on the existence of the hstore extension. Ideas? ________________________________ Information in this e-mail may be confidential. It is intended only for the addressee(s) identified above. If you are notthe addressee(s), or an employee or agent of the addressee(s), please note that any dissemination, distribution, or copyingof this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the senderof the error.
On 03/08/2016 10:27 AM, Feld, Michael (IMS) wrote: > I am attempting to upgrade my organization's database cluster from 9.1.19 to 9.5.1 using the pg_upgrade utility. Aftersome processing, the tool bails out with the following error in the log: > > pg_restore: creating OPERATOR "public.=>" > pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error while PROCESSING TOC: > pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error from TOC entry 5660; 2617 5655672 OPERATOR => postgres > pg_restore: [archiver (db)] could not execute query: ERROR: syntax error at or near "=>" > LINE 1: CREATE OPERATOR => ( > ^ > Command was: CREATE OPERATOR => ( > PROCEDURE = "hstore", > LEFTARG = "text", > RIGHTARG = "text" > ); > > -- For binary upgrade, handle... > > I tried dropping the operator before doing the upgrade but it's dependent on the existence of the hstore extension. Ideas? Believe it has to do with this: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.5/interactive/release-9-5.html " Allow => to specify named parameters in function calls (Pavel Stehule) E.2.3.7. Functions Previously only := could be used. This requires removing the possibility for => to be a user-defined operator. Creation of user-defined => operators has been issuing warnings since PostgreSQL 9.0." and the removal of => as operator from here: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.5/interactive/hstore.html I remember a similar problem with just a regular dump/restore. If I remember correctly I solved it by doing: \dx in psql to see what extensions where installed and when I did not see hstore doing: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/interactive/sql-createextension.html " CREATE EXTENSION hstore SCHEMA public FROM unpackaged; Be careful to specify the schema in which you installed the existing hstore objects." on the older Postgres version and then repeating the dump/restore. > > ________________________________ > > Information in this e-mail may be confidential. It is intended only for the addressee(s) identified above. If you are notthe addressee(s), or an employee or agent of the addressee(s), please note that any dissemination, distribution, or copyingof this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the senderof the error. > > -- Adrian Klaver adrian.klaver@aklaver.com
"Feld, Michael (IMS)" <FeldM@imsweb.com> writes: > I am attempting to upgrade my organization's database cluster from > 9.1.19 to 9.5.1 using the pg_upgrade utility. That's kind of a big jump :-( ... you missed the versions where => was deprecated as an operator name. > I tried dropping the operator before doing the upgrade but it's dependent on the existence of the hstore extension. Ideas? The clean solution would be to copy share/extension/hstore--1.0--1.1.sql from the 9.5 installation into the 9.1 installation and then do ALTER EXTENSION hstore UPDATE TO '1.1'; Under the hood that's just doing ALTER EXTENSION hstore DROP OPERATOR => (text, text); DROP OPERATOR => (text, text); but if you did that manually, you'd have a problem when you want to update hstore to current versions later. If you do what I suggest, the extension will properly look like it's 1.1 after pg_upgrade'ing. regards, tom lane
Thanks for the assist Tom. That worked for us. Noticing a different issue following the pg_upgrade. If we take a pg_dumpof a database on this upgraded instance with the hstore extension and try to pg_restore it back up to the same instancewe get the following errors (ignore the likeness to your name, apparently when this cluster was created years agothey chose to set it up in your honor): pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error while PROCESSING TOC: pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error from TOC entry 3879; 2753 745119 OPERATOR FAMILY btree_ hstore_ops tomlane pg_restore: [archiver (db)] could not execute query: ERROR: operator family "btree_hstore_ops" for access method "btree"already exists Command was: CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY btree_hstore_ops USING btree; pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error from TOC entry 3880; 2753 745127 OPERATOR FAMILY gin_hs tore_ops tomlane pg_restore: [archiver (db)] could not execute query: ERROR: operator family "gin_hstore_ops" for access method "gin" alreadyexists Command was: CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY gin_hstore_ops USING gin; pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error from TOC entry 3881; 2753 745137 OPERATOR FAMILY gist_h store_ops tomlane pg_restore: [archiver (db)] could not execute query: ERROR: operator family "gist_hstore_ops" for access method "gist" alreadyexists Command was: CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY gist_hstore_ops USING gist; pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error from TOC entry 3882; 2753 745151 OPERATOR FAMILY hash_h store_ops tomlane pg_restore: [archiver (db)] could not execute query: ERROR: operator family "hash_hstore_ops" for access method "hash" alreadyexists Command was: CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY hash_hstore_ops USING hash; We do not have this issue for any new databases created following the pg_upgrade. I noticed that new databases have the hstore1.3 version while the originals still have the 1.1 version. I updated the extension on one of these to see if thatwould resolve the issue and it did not. Thanks for any help you can offer. -----Original Message----- From: Tom Lane [mailto:tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us] Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2016 6:22 PM To: Feld, Michael (IMS) <FeldM@imsweb.com> Cc: pgsql-general@postgresql.org Subject: Re: [GENERAL] pg_upgrade error regarding hstore operator "Feld, Michael (IMS)" <FeldM@imsweb.com> writes: > I am attempting to upgrade my organization's database cluster from > 9.1.19 to 9.5.1 using the pg_upgrade utility. That's kind of a big jump :-( ... you missed the versions where => was deprecated as an operator name. > I tried dropping the operator before doing the upgrade but it's dependent on the existence of the hstore extension. Ideas? The clean solution would be to copy share/extension/hstore--1.0--1.1.sql from the 9.5 installation into the 9.1 installation and then do ALTER EXTENSION hstore UPDATE TO '1.1'; Under the hood that's just doing ALTER EXTENSION hstore DROP OPERATOR => (text, text); DROP OPERATOR => (text, text); but if you did that manually, you'd have a problem when you want to update hstore to current versions later. If you do whatI suggest, the extension will properly look like it's 1.1 after pg_upgrade'ing. regards, tom lane ________________________________ Information in this e-mail may be confidential. It is intended only for the addressee(s) identified above. If you are notthe addressee(s), or an employee or agent of the addressee(s), please note that any dissemination, distribution, or copyingof this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the senderof the error.
"Feld, Michael (IMS)" <FeldM@imsweb.com> writes: > Thanks for the assist Tom. That worked for us. Noticing a different > issue following the pg_upgrade. If we take a pg_dump of a database on > this upgraded instance with the hstore extension and try to pg_restore > it back up to the same instance we get the following errors Those are the *only* errors you get? That seems rather odd. I could believe something like this happening if, say, you had an "unpackaged" (that is, pre-extensions) version of hstore lying about. But then you'd probably get conflicts on all the hstore-related objects, not only the opclasses. In any case, by far the most likely explanation is that you're trying to restore into a non-empty database, probably because you've put stuff into template1 and are cloning the new database from there. regards, tom lane
Thanks for the reply Tom. template1 is definitely empty and does not contain any hstore objects. I did a little debuggingand placed the below SQL before and after the hstore creation in the file produced by the pg_dump and determinedthat these operator objects only become present immediately after the creation of the hstore extension, and notbefore. Then, much later down the pg_dump file, it attempts to create the operator family for these 4 items producingthe errors. I did a pg_dump of the same database on a 9.1 instance and it does not produce the operator creationobjects SQL outside of the extension. This seems to be something that happened as part of the pg_upgrade. Any ideawhy these have showed up outside the extension? Is there anything I can do to fix this? Thanks for all of your help. Mike SELECT am.amname AS index_method, opf.opfname AS opfamily_name, amop.amopopr::regoperator AS opfamily_operator FROM pg_am am, pg_opfamily opf, pg_amop amop WHERE opf.opfmethod = am.oid AND amop.amopfamily = opf.oid and opf.opfname like '%hstore%' ORDER BY index_method, opfamily_name, opfamily_operator; -----Original Message----- From: Tom Lane [mailto:tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us] Sent: Wednesday, April 06, 2016 7:01 PM To: Feld, Michael (IMS) <FeldM@imsweb.com> Cc: pgsql-general@postgresql.org Subject: Re: [GENERAL] pg_upgrade error regarding hstore operator "Feld, Michael (IMS)" <FeldM@imsweb.com> writes: > Thanks for the assist Tom. That worked for us. Noticing a different > issue following the pg_upgrade. If we take a pg_dump of a database on > this upgraded instance with the hstore extension and try to pg_restore > it back up to the same instance we get the following errors Those are the *only* errors you get? That seems rather odd. I could believe something like this happening if, say, youhad an "unpackaged" (that is, pre-extensions) version of hstore lying about. But then you'd probably get conflicts on all the hstore-relatedobjects, not only the opclasses. In any case, by far the most likely explanation is that you're trying to restore into a non-empty database, probably becauseyou've put stuff into template1 and are cloning the new database from there. regards, tom lane ________________________________ Information in this e-mail may be confidential. It is intended only for the addressee(s) identified above. If you are notthe addressee(s), or an employee or agent of the addressee(s), please note that any dissemination, distribution, or copyingof this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the senderof the error.
"Feld, Michael (IMS)" <FeldM@imsweb.com> writes: > Thanks for the reply Tom. template1 is definitely empty and does not contain any hstore objects. I did a little debuggingand placed the below SQL before and after the hstore creation in the file produced by the pg_dump and determinedthat these operator objects only become present immediately after the creation of the hstore extension, and notbefore. Then, much later down the pg_dump file, it attempts to create the operator family for these 4 items producingthe errors. I did a pg_dump of the same database on a 9.1 instance and it does not produce the operator creationobjects SQL outside of the extension. This seems to be something that happened as part of the pg_upgrade. Any ideawhy these have showed up outside the extension? Is there anything I can do to fix this? Thanks for all of your help. I got some time today to try to reproduce this problem, and failed. What I did was: * install hstore 1.0 extension in a 9.1 database * upgrade the extension to 1.1 (as per instructions upthread) * pg_upgrade the database to HEAD * pg_dump the database The pg_dump output shows the expected CREATE EXTENSION command and no other extraneous objects. So the procedure is fine. I have to conclude there was something weird about the initial state of your 9.1 database. I have too little info to say what exactly. > SELECT am.amname AS index_method, > opf.opfname AS opfamily_name, > amop.amopopr::regoperator AS opfamily_operator > FROM pg_am am, pg_opfamily opf, pg_amop amop > WHERE opf.opfmethod = am.oid AND > amop.amopfamily = opf.oid and opf.opfname like '%hstore%' > ORDER BY index_method, opfamily_name, opfamily_operator; Uh, what did you get from that query? Might also be useful to see select * from pg_opclass where opcintype = 'hstore'::regtype; and the output of "\dx+ hstore" in psql. regards, tom lane
Thanks for the reply Tom. For the first query, I get the following result on both 9.1 and pg_upgrade'd 9.5. SELECT am.amname AS index_method, opf.opfname AS opfamily_name, amop.amopopr::regoperator AS opfamily_operator FROM pg_am am, pg_opfamily opf, pg_amop amop WHERE opf.opfmethod = am.oid AND amop.amopfamily = opf.oid and opf.opfname like '%hstore%' ORDER BY index_method, opfamily_name, opfamily_operator; index_method;opfamily_name;opfamily_operator "btree";"btree_hstore_ops";"=(hstore,hstore)" "btree";"btree_hstore_ops";"#>#(hstore,hstore)" "btree";"btree_hstore_ops";"#>=#(hstore,hstore)" "btree";"btree_hstore_ops";"#<#(hstore,hstore)" "btree";"btree_hstore_ops";"#<=#(hstore,hstore)" "gin";"gin_hstore_ops";"?(hstore,text)" "gin";"gin_hstore_ops";"?|(hstore,text[])" "gin";"gin_hstore_ops";"?&(hstore,text[])" "gin";"gin_hstore_ops";"@>(hstore,hstore)" "gist";"gist_hstore_ops";"?(hstore,text)" "gist";"gist_hstore_ops";"?|(hstore,text[])" "gist";"gist_hstore_ops";"?&(hstore,text[])" "gist";"gist_hstore_ops";"@>(hstore,hstore)" "gist";"gist_hstore_ops";"@(hstore,hstore)" "hash";"hash_hstore_ops";"=(hstore,hstore)" For the second query you provided, I get this for the database on 9.1: select * from pg_opclass where opcintype = 'hstore'::regtype; opcmethod;opcname;opcnamespace;opcowner;opcfamily;opcintype;opcdefault;opckeytype 403;"btree_hstore_ops";2200;16384;325462122;325462056;t;0 405;"hash_hstore_ops";2200;16384;325462131;325462056;t;0 783;"gist_hstore_ops";2200;16384;325462146;325462056;t;325462135 2742;"gin_hstore_ops";2200;16384;325462163;325462056;t;25 And this for the same database on pg_upgrade'd 9.5: opcmethod;opcname;opcnamespace;opcowner;opcfamily;opcintype;opcdefault;opckeytype 403;"btree_hstore_ops";2200;16384;17079;325462056;t;0 2742;"gin_hstore_ops";2200;16384;17087;325462056;t;25 783;"gist_hstore_ops";2200;16384;17097;325462056;t;325462135 405;"hash_hstore_ops";2200;16384;17111;325462056;t;0 In addition, I noticed the following differences in the pg_depend catalog, there are 4 entries in 9.1 that are missing in9.5 which I have separated with ***: select classid::regclass, objid, objsubid, refclassid::regclass, refobjid, refobjsubid, deptype, opcname, opfname from pg_dependpgd left join pg_opclass on pgd.objid = pg_opclass.oid left join pg_opfamily on pgd.objid = pg_opfamily.oid whereclassid in ('pg_opfamily'::regclass, 'pg_opclass'::regclass) order by 7,8,9; 9.1: classid;objid;objsubid;refclassid;refobjid;refobjsubid;deptype;opcname;opfname "pg_opclass";325462123;0;"pg_opfamily";325462122;0;"a";"btree_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462164;0;"pg_opfamily";325462163;0;"a";"gin_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462147;0;"pg_opfamily";325462146;0;"a";"gist_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462132;0;"pg_opfamily";325462131;0;"a";"hash_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462123;0;"pg_extension";325462055;0;"e";"btree_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462164;0;"pg_extension";325462055;0;"e";"gin_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462147;0;"pg_extension";325462055;0;"e";"gist_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462132;0;"pg_extension";325462055;0;"e";"hash_hstore_ops";"" *** "pg_opfamily";325462122;0;"pg_extension";325462055;0;"e";"";"btree_hstore_ops" "pg_opfamily";325462163;0;"pg_extension";325462055;0;"e";"";"gin_hstore_ops" "pg_opfamily";325462146;0;"pg_extension";325462055;0;"e";"";"gist_hstore_ops" "pg_opfamily";325462131;0;"pg_extension";325462055;0;"e";"";"hash_hstore_ops" *** "pg_opclass";325462123;0;"pg_type";325462056;0;"n";"btree_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462123;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"btree_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462164;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"gin_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462164;0;"pg_type";325462056;0;"n";"gin_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462147;0;"pg_type";325462056;0;"n";"gist_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462147;0;"pg_type";325462135;0;"n";"gist_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462147;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"gist_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462132;0;"pg_type";325462056;0;"n";"hash_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";325462132;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"hash_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opfamily";325462122;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"";"btree_hstore_ops" "pg_opfamily";325462163;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"";"gin_hstore_ops" "pg_opfamily";325462146;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"";"gist_hstore_ops" "pg_opfamily";325462131;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"";"hash_hstore_ops" 9.5: classid;objid;objsubid;refclassid;refobjid;refobjsubid;deptype;opcname;opfname "pg_opclass";17080;0;"pg_opfamily";17079;0;"a";"btree_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17088;0;"pg_opfamily";17087;0;"a";"gin_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17098;0;"pg_opfamily";17097;0;"a";"gist_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17112;0;"pg_opfamily";17111;0;"a";"hash_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17080;0;"pg_extension";16651;0;"e";"btree_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17088;0;"pg_extension";16651;0;"e";"gin_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17098;0;"pg_extension";16651;0;"e";"gist_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17112;0;"pg_extension";16651;0;"e";"hash_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17080;0;"pg_type";325462056;0;"n";"btree_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17080;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"btree_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17088;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"gin_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17088;0;"pg_type";325462056;0;"n";"gin_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17098;0;"pg_type";325462056;0;"n";"gist_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17098;0;"pg_type";325462135;0;"n";"gist_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17098;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"gist_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17112;0;"pg_type";325462056;0;"n";"hash_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opclass";17112;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"hash_hstore_ops";"" "pg_opfamily";17079;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"";"btree_hstore_ops" "pg_opfamily";17087;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"";"gin_hstore_ops" "pg_opfamily";17097;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"";"gist_hstore_ops" "pg_opfamily";17111;0;"pg_namespace";2200;0;"n";"";"hash_hstore_ops" output of \dx+ hstore: 9.1 cast from text[] to hstore function akeys(hstore) function avals(hstore) function defined(hstore,text) function delete(hstore,hstore) function delete(hstore,text) function delete(hstore,text[]) function each(hstore) function exist(hstore,text) function exists_all(hstore,text[]) function exists_any(hstore,text[]) function fetchval(hstore,text) function ghstore_compress(internal) function ghstore_consistent(internal,internal,integer,oid,internal) function ghstore_decompress(internal) function ghstore_in(cstring) function ghstore_out(ghstore) function ghstore_penalty(internal,internal,internal) function ghstore_picksplit(internal,internal) function ghstore_same(internal,internal,internal) function ghstore_union(internal,internal) function gin_consistent_hstore(internal,smallint,internal,integer,internal,internal) function gin_extract_hstore(internal,internal) function gin_extract_hstore_query(internal,internal,smallint,internal,internal) function hs_concat(hstore,hstore) function hs_contained(hstore,hstore) function hs_contains(hstore,hstore) function hstore(record) function hstore(text,text) function hstore(text[]) function hstore(text[],text[]) function hstore_cmp(hstore,hstore) function hstore_eq(hstore,hstore) function hstore_ge(hstore,hstore) function hstore_gt(hstore,hstore) function hstore_hash(hstore) function hstore_in(cstring) function hstore_le(hstore,hstore) function hstore_lt(hstore,hstore) function hstore_ne(hstore,hstore) function hstore_out(hstore) function hstore_recv(internal) function hstore_send(hstore) function hstore_to_array(hstore) function hstore_to_matrix(hstore) function hstore_version_diag(hstore) function isdefined(hstore,text) function isexists(hstore,text) function populate_record(anyelement,hstore) function skeys(hstore) function slice(hstore,text[]) function slice_array(hstore,text[]) function svals(hstore) function tconvert(text,text) operator #<#(hstore,hstore) operator #<=#(hstore,hstore) operator #=(anyelement,hstore) operator #>#(hstore,hstore) operator #>=#(hstore,hstore) operator %#(NONE,hstore) operator %%(NONE,hstore) operator -(hstore,hstore) operator -(hstore,text) operator -(hstore,text[]) operator ->(hstore,text) operator ->(hstore,text[]) operator <>(hstore,hstore) operator <@(hstore,hstore) operator =(hstore,hstore) operator =>(text,text) operator ?&(hstore,text[]) operator ?(hstore,text) operator ?|(hstore,text[]) operator @(hstore,hstore) operator @>(hstore,hstore) operator class btree_hstore_ops for access method btree operator class gin_hstore_ops for access method gin operator class gist_hstore_ops for access method gist operator class hash_hstore_ops for access method hash operator family btree_hstore_ops for access method btree operator family gin_hstore_ops for access method gin operator family gist_hstore_ops for access method gist operator family hash_hstore_ops for access method hash operator ||(hstore,hstore) operator ~(hstore,hstore) type ghstore type hstore 9.5: cast from text[] to hstore function akeys(hstore) function avals(hstore) function defined(hstore,text) function delete(hstore,hstore) function delete(hstore,text) function delete(hstore,text[]) function each(hstore) function exist(hstore,text) function exists_all(hstore,text[]) function exists_any(hstore,text[]) function fetchval(hstore,text) function ghstore_compress(internal) function ghstore_consistent(internal,internal,integer,oid,internal) function ghstore_decompress(internal) function ghstore_in(cstring) function ghstore_out(ghstore) function ghstore_penalty(internal,internal,internal) function ghstore_picksplit(internal,internal) function ghstore_same(internal,internal,internal) function ghstore_union(internal,internal) function gin_consistent_hstore(internal,smallint,internal,integer,internal,internal) function gin_extract_hstore(internal,internal) function gin_extract_hstore_query(internal,internal,smallint,internal,internal) function hs_concat(hstore,hstore) function hs_contained(hstore,hstore) function hs_contains(hstore,hstore) function hstore(record) function hstore(text,text) function hstore(text[]) function hstore(text[],text[]) function hstore_cmp(hstore,hstore) function hstore_eq(hstore,hstore) function hstore_ge(hstore,hstore) function hstore_gt(hstore,hstore) function hstore_hash(hstore) function hstore_in(cstring) function hstore_le(hstore,hstore) function hstore_lt(hstore,hstore) function hstore_ne(hstore,hstore) function hstore_out(hstore) function hstore_recv(internal) function hstore_send(hstore) function hstore_to_array(hstore) function hstore_to_matrix(hstore) function hstore_version_diag(hstore) function isdefined(hstore,text) function isexists(hstore,text) function populate_record(anyelement,hstore) function skeys(hstore) function slice(hstore,text[]) function slice_array(hstore,text[]) function svals(hstore) function tconvert(text,text) operator #<#(hstore,hstore) operator #<=#(hstore,hstore) operator #=(anyelement,hstore) operator #>#(hstore,hstore) operator #>=#(hstore,hstore) operator %#(NONE,hstore) operator %%(NONE,hstore) operator -(hstore,hstore) operator -(hstore,text) operator -(hstore,text[]) operator ->(hstore,text) operator ->(hstore,text[]) operator <>(hstore,hstore) operator <@(hstore,hstore) operator =(hstore,hstore) operator ?&(hstore,text[]) operator ?(hstore,text) operator ?|(hstore,text[]) operator @(hstore,hstore) operator @>(hstore,hstore) operator class btree_hstore_ops for access method btree operator class gin_hstore_ops for access method gin operator class gist_hstore_ops for access method gist operator class hash_hstore_ops for access method hash operator ||(hstore,hstore) operator ~(hstore,hstore) type ghstore type hstore (82 rows) Thanks again for you time and assistance, Mike -----Original Message----- From: Tom Lane [mailto:tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us] Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2016 5:40 PM To: Feld, Michael (IMS) <FeldM@imsweb.com> Cc: pgsql-general@postgresql.org Subject: Re: [GENERAL] pg_upgrade error regarding hstore operator "Feld, Michael (IMS)" <FeldM@imsweb.com> writes: > Thanks for the reply Tom. template1 is definitely empty and does not contain any hstore objects. I did a little debuggingand placed the below SQL before and after the hstore creation in the file produced by the pg_dump and determinedthat these operator objects only become present immediately after the creation of the hstore extension, and notbefore. Then, much later down the pg_dump file, it attempts to create the operator family for these 4 items producingthe errors. I did a pg_dump of the same database on a 9.1 instance and it does not produce the operator creationobjects SQL outside of the extension. This seems to be something that happened as part of the pg_upgrade. Any ideawhy these have showed up outside the extension? Is there anything I can do to fix this? Thanks for all of your help. I got some time today to try to reproduce this problem, and failed. What I did was: * install hstore 1.0 extension in a 9.1 database * upgrade the extension to 1.1 (as per instructions upthread) * pg_upgrade the database to HEAD * pg_dump the database The pg_dump output shows the expected CREATE EXTENSION command and no other extraneous objects. So the procedure is fine. I have to conclude there was something weird about the initial state of your 9.1 database. I have too little info to say what exactly. > SELECT am.amname AS index_method, > opf.opfname AS opfamily_name, > amop.amopopr::regoperator AS opfamily_operator > FROM pg_am am, pg_opfamily opf, pg_amop amop > WHERE opf.opfmethod = am.oid AND > amop.amopfamily = opf.oid and opf.opfname like '%hstore%' > ORDER BY index_method, opfamily_name, opfamily_operator; Uh, what did you get from that query? Might also be useful to see select * from pg_opclass where opcintype = 'hstore'::regtype; and the output of "\dx+ hstore" in psql. regards, tom lane ________________________________ Information in this e-mail may be confidential. It is intended only for the addressee(s) identified above. If you are notthe addressee(s), or an employee or agent of the addressee(s), please note that any dissemination, distribution, or copyingof this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the senderof the error.
Hello, All I have the same issue after pg_upgrade from 9.3 to 9.5. pg_dump generates excess commands like CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY bit_ops USING gin; ... while all of this is done during CREATE EXTENSION (i have only btree_gin and plpgsql installed) -- View this message in context: http://postgresql.nabble.com/pg-upgrade-error-regarding-hstore-operator-tp5891425p5904776.html Sent from the PostgreSQL - general mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
parihaaraka <parihaaraka@gmail.com> writes: > I have the same issue after pg_upgrade from 9.3 to 9.5. > pg_dump generates excess commands like > CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY bit_ops USING gin; > ... > while all of this is done during CREATE EXTENSION This is fixed in the latest round of minor releases, but not in a way that will help you if you already pg_upgrade'd such an extension: http://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git&a=commitdiff&h=6cead413b Per the comments there, you could manually add that operator family back to its extension, or just ignore the duplicate-opfamily complaints you'd get during a restore. regards, tom lane