Attached is a patch to correct white space issues in FAQ_MSWIN.

Daniel Convissor
This commit is contained in:
Bruce Momjian 2003-11-28 20:22:18 +00:00
parent d5f6cfc72e
commit 5495e607d0

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How to install PostgreSQL on Windows
====================================
$Date: 2003/11/13 03:53:00 $
$Date: 2003/11/28 20:22:18 $
PostgreSQL requires the appropriate subset of Cygwin DLLs to be
PostgreSQL requires the appropriate subset of Cygwin DLLs to be
installed in order that it functions under Windows.
This document assumes that you do not have Cygwin already installed
@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ adjust these instructions accordingly.
2. Proceed through the Cygwin install wizard. Choose 'Install from
Internet', specify a Local Package Directory and choose a mirror
site that's close to you. Answer the other installer questions
appropriately for your configuration.
appropriately for your configuration.
When you come to the point of choosing which packages to install,
expand the 'Database' section and click 'Skip' next to PostgreSQL
@ -28,15 +28,15 @@ adjust these instructions accordingly.
3. Once the download and install process is complete, open a Cygwin
shell and do the following for a basic installation:
3a. Start ipc-daemon2 for shared memory support. To do this,
enter the command "ipc-daemon2 &". This program
needs to be running anytime you start the PostgreSQL server
3a. Start ipc-daemon2 for shared memory support. To do this,
enter the command "ipc-daemon2 &". This program
needs to be running anytime you start the PostgreSQL server
(postmaster) or initialize a database (initdb).
3b. Use the initdb command to create a new database cluster. An
example command would be:
initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/data -W -E LATIN1
initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/data -W -E LATIN1
Which will create a cluster in the /usr/local/pgsql/data
directory, will prompt for a superuser password and will
@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ adjust these instructions accordingly.
3c. Start up the postmaster. Use a command similar to the
following:
postmaster -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
postmaster -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
This will start the postmaster, and if successful you will
see some initial log entries, and an entry "LOG: database
@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ Known issues
2. "make check" can generate spurious regression test failures due to
overflowing the listen() backlog queue which causes connection
refused errors or hangs. You can limit the number of connections
refused errors or hangs. You can limit the number of connections
using the MAX_CONNECTIONS option thus:
make MAX_CONNECTIONS=5 check