> > I think parsing the file contents is too hard.  The database would have
> > to be running and I would use psql.
> 
> I don't know, I recovered someone's database using a "raw" connection ...
> wasn't that difficult once I figured out the format *shrug*
> 
> the following gets the oid,relname's for a database in the format:
> 
> echo "select oid,relname from pg_class" | postgres -L -D /usr/local/pgsql/data eceb 
>| egrep "oid|relname"
> 
> then just parse the output using a simple perl script:
> 
>          1: oid = "163338"      (typeid = 26, len = 4, typmod = -1, byval = t)
>          2: relname = "auth_info_uid_key"       (typeid = 19, len = 32, typmod = -1, 
>byval = f)
>          1: oid = "163341"      (typeid = 26, len = 4, typmod = -1, byval = t)
>          2: relname = "auth_info_id"    (typeid = 19, len = 32, typmod = -1, byval = 
>f)
>          1: oid = "56082"       (typeid = 26, len = 4, typmod = -1, byval = t)
>          2: relname = "auth_info"       (typeid = 19, len = 32, typmod = -1, byval = 
>f)

Oh, you did a direct postgres backend connect.  Yes, that will work
fine.  Good idea if the postmaster is down.  I originally thought you
meant reading the pg_class file raw.  Of course, that would be really
hard because there is no way to know what numeric file is pg_class!

Actually, seems it is always 1259.  I see this in
include/catalog/pg_class.h:

        DATA(insert OID = 1259 (  pg_class 83         PGUID 0 1259 0 0 0 0 f f r
        22 0 0 0 0 0 f f f _null_ ));

-- 
  Bruce Momjian                        |  http://candle.pha.pa.us
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]               |  (610) 853-3000
  +  If your life is a hard drive,     |  830 Blythe Avenue
  +  Christ can be your backup.        |  Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania 19026

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