Hi Neil,
thanks for your quick and direct feedback and please excuse my incautiousness. Being a software developer, I am still new to admin stuff and don't have much experience in hosting servers.
The "flush" command is documented in the help text of "lava-server manage". From the information there it seemed as if "lava-server manage dumpdata" would create a dump of the database (which it did) and that I might be able to restore it with "lava-server manage loaddata" (which I couldn't) if the flush would not do what I expected.
However, the database in that installation was not important at all, I spent some time experimenting with LAVA on this machine and just wanted to have a clean database for starting production use. I assumed there should be an easy way to achieve this.
With your help, I was able to reset my LAVA database using the following commands:
sudo apt-get purge lava-server sudo rm -rf /etc/lava-server/ sudo rm -rf /var/lib/lava-server/ sudo pg_dropcluster 9.6 main --stop sudo pg_createcluster 9.6 main --start sudo apt-get install lava-server
Thanks for pointing me to the backup topic, I will address that in my next step.
Cheers, Tim
Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Best regards Tim Jaacks DEVELOPMENT ENGINEER Garz & Fricke GmbH Tempowerkring 2 21079 Hamburg Direct: +49 40 791 899 - 55 Fax: +49 40 791899 - 39 tim.jaacks@garz-fricke.com www.garz-fricke.com SOLUTIONS THAT COMPLETE!
Sitz der Gesellschaft: D-21079 Hamburg Registergericht: Amtsgericht Hamburg, HRB 60514 Geschäftsführer: Matthias Fricke, Manfred Garz
On Tue, 25 Sep 2018 at 11:01, Tim Jaacks tim.jaacks@garz-fricke.com wrote:
Hi Neil,
thanks for your quick and direct feedback and please excuse my incautiousness. Being a software developer, I am still new to admin stuff and don't have much experience in hosting servers.
The "flush" command is documented in the help text of "lava-server manage". From the information there it seemed as if "lava-server manage dumpdata" would create a dump of the database (which it did) and that I might be able to restore it with "lava-server manage loaddata" (which I couldn't) if the flush would not do what I expected.
However, the database in that installation was not important at all, I spent some time experimenting with LAVA on this machine and just wanted to have a clean database for starting production use. I assumed there should be an easy way to achieve this.
Typically, that would be a fresh install on a new machine. You'll likely need a developer instance to use as a staging post to check operations ahead of the next upgrade of LAVA software. Avoid only having a production instance because that leads you into another nightmare of trying to patch a live production instance.
With your help, I was able to reset my LAVA database using the following commands:
sudo apt-get purge lava-server sudo rm -rf /etc/lava-server/ sudo rm -rf /var/lib/lava-server/ sudo pg_dropcluster 9.6 main --stop sudo pg_createcluster 9.6 main --start sudo apt-get install lava-server
Thanks for pointing me to the backup topic, I will address that in my next step.
Cheers, Tim
Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Best regards Tim Jaacks DEVELOPMENT ENGINEER Garz & Fricke GmbH Tempowerkring 2 21079 Hamburg Direct: +49 40 791 899 - 55 Fax: +49 40 791899 - 39 tim.jaacks@garz-fricke.com www.garz-fricke.com SOLUTIONS THAT COMPLETE!
Sitz der Gesellschaft: D-21079 Hamburg Registergericht: Amtsgericht Hamburg, HRB 60514 Geschäftsführer: Matthias Fricke, Manfred Garz _______________________________________________ Lava-users mailing list Lava-users@lists.linaro.org https://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/lava-users
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