Erik Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Well, if Postgres had killed the proc itself it would have written  
> out a nicely formatted Postgres-style memory context report along  
> with an ERROR message along the lines of OUT OF MEMORY and the  
> request size and Postgres would not have bounced.  Since the  
> postmaster dropped into recovery mode when the proc received the  
> SIGABRT and died, that means that the signal came from somewhere  
> else, OOM killer?

No, an abort() is expected when glibc's malloc code detects a problem,
and all that other junk is stuff that malloc helpfully prints on stderr
before committing hara-kiri.

This seems clearly a memory-stomp bug of some kind (although there's
a very small probability that it was a transient RAM glitch).  Not much
we can do about it without a test case, though.

                        regards, tom lane

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