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Using Debian Wheezy, Postgresql 9.3

My database went down because the partition where it keeps the WAL files got full. So, I deleted everything inside ./pg_xlog/ , because I didn't know what they were (yea, incredibly stupid of me). Now the Postgres service won't start, though the problem, according to syslog:

00000: could not open tablespace directory "pg_tblspc/16386/PG_9.3_201306121": File or directory not found
LOCAL:  RelationCacheInitFileRemoveInDir, relcache.c:4895
00000: Primary checkpoint record is invalid
LOCAL:  ReadCheckpointRecord, xlog.c:6543
00000: Secondary checkpoint record is invalid
LOCAL:  ReadCheckpointRecord, xlog.c:6547
PANIC: XX000: could not locate a valid checkpoint record
LOCAL:  StartupXLOG, xlog.c:5228

I'm not entirely sure whether the problem is that it can't find the proper pg_tblspc or the total lack of checkpoint WAL files. The actual path to where the databases are stored is /dados/PG_9.3_201306121. What can I do to make the service start again?

EDIT1: Okay, I've managed to get the thing back online. Some databases got corrupt. I've managed to DROPDB two of them (couldn't even connect to them without them forcing a service restart). I tried doing it to another one that got corrupt, but the error was related to xlog again. I've tried doing a clean restore over it, but the restore was incomplete. Then, I've created a new database and tried to restore an older backup of this database. It also came incomplete.

Now I can't drop any databases, nor create new ones, I always get a xlog flush request not satisfied error. I've tried running pg_resetxlog, but it didn't seem to do anything. Another thing the error shows is cannot write to block 1 of pg_tblspc/16385/PG_9.3_201306121/36596452/11773, write error may be permanent.

EDIT2: Part of the problem above was with that 11773 file. I've renamed it to 11773.corrupt and now the database allows me to create and drop again.

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  • Nonono, don't keep using it! Back it up, shut it down, rename the old data directory, initdb a new one (or use your package's wrapper, however you first set it up) and then restore your dumps to the new PostgreSQL instance. Apr 30, 2016 at 8:10

1 Answer 1

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Postgres won't start after deleting pg_xlog files

Um, yeah. Don't do that.

What can I do to make the service start again?

Well, you've corrupted your database. Restore from backups. You have backups, right? Preferably a handy PITR archive like from PgBarman where you can restore up to 5 mins ago. No?

OK, first, archive the damaged copy. https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Corruption

Now. If you're lucky, pg_resetxlog will get you up and running enough to successfully do a pg_dump of the database, so you can then move the old damaged install's datadir aside, initdb a new one, and restore the database to it.

If you're unlucky pg_dump won't succeed, or you'll get restore failures due to things like duplicate primary keys. In the latter case might have to repair the dump by hand. If pg_dump fails, appropriate action will depend on why it fails.

So yeah. Don't delete pg_xlog.

There are discussions within the PostgreSQL community about renaming pg_xlog to something that makes it more obvious that it's an important component of the database, and hopefully it'll get done in the 9.7 release.

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  • Okay, I've got the backups, but now some of the databases are corrupt. Well, this wouldn't be a problem, but now I can't DROP or CREATE databases, I always get a "xlog flush request not satisfied" error
    – Arthur
    Apr 29, 2016 at 18:25
  • You'll have to initdb, Apr 30, 2016 at 7:56

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