On 07/12/2017 01:54 PM, Albe Laurenz wrote:
rihad wrote:Hi there. We have a working database that was unfortunately created by initdb with default ("C") collation & ctype. All other locale specific settings have the value en_US.UTF-8 in postgresql.conf. The database itself is multilingual and all its data is stored in UTF-8. Sorting doesn't work correctly, though. To fix that, can I just do this:update pg_database set datcollate='en_US.UTF-8', datctype='en_US.UTF-8' where datname='mydb'; This does seem to work on a testing copy of the database, i.e. select lower('БлаБлаБла') now works correctly when connected to that database. Is there still any chance for corrupting data by doing this, or indexes stopping working etc? p.s.: postgres 9.6.3As explained, yes. Indexes on string columns will be corrupted. See this example: test=# CREATE DATABASE breakme LC_COLLATE "C" LC_CTYPE "C" TEMPLATE template0; test=# \c breakme breakme=# CREATE TABLE sort(id integer PRIMARY KEY, val text NOT NULL); breakme=# INSERT INTO sort VALUES (1, 'LITTLE'), (2, 'big'), (3, 'b-less'); breakme=# CREATE INDEX ON sort(val); breakme=# SET enable_seqscan=off; -- force index use breakme=# SELECT * FROM sort ORDER BY val; ┌────┬────────┐ │ id │ val │ ├────┼────────┤ │ 1 │ LITTLE │ │ 3 │ b-less │ │ 2 │ big │ └────┴────────┘ (3 rows) breakme=# UPDATE pg_database SET datcollate='en_US.UTF-8', datctype='en_US.UTF-8' WHERE datname='breakme'; breakme=# \c breakme breakme=# SET enable_seqscan=off; -- force index use breakme=# SELECT * FROM sort ORDER BY val; ┌────┬────────┐ │ id │ val │ ├────┼────────┤ │ 1 │ LITTLE │ │ 3 │ b-less │ │ 2 │ big │ └────┴────────┘ (3 rows) breakme=# SET enable_seqscan=on; -- this and the following force sequential scan breakme=# SET enable_bitmapscan=off; breakme=# SET enable_indexscan=off; breakme=# SET enable_indexonlyscan=off; breakme=# SELECT * FROM sort ORDER BY val; -- this returns the correct order ┌────┬────────┐ │ id │ val │ ├────┼────────┤ │ 2 │ big │ │ 3 │ b-less │ │ 1 │ LITTLE │ └────┴────────┘ (3 rows) As you see, your index is still sorted according to the C collation and scanning it returns wrong results. Yours, Laurenz Albe
This ordering issue can certainly be classified as an inconsistency, but nothing to lose sleep over. Is this all that is normally meant when saying "index corruption"? What about updating or deleting the wrong row addressed by the textual index that hasn't been rebuilt after datcollate/datctype change, complete table/database corruption, or other scary night-time stories of this kind? Possible?
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