if (written >= MAXCMDLEN)
pg_log(PG_FATAL, "command too long\n");
- if ((log = fopen_priv(log_file, "a+")) == NULL)
+ if ((log = fopen_priv(log_file, "a")) == NULL)
pg_log(PG_FATAL, "cannot write to log file %s\n", log_file);
+#ifdef WIN32
+ fprintf(log, "\n\n");
+#endif
pg_log(PG_VERBOSE, "%s\n", cmd);
fprintf(log, "command: %s\n", cmd);
#ifndef WIN32
/*
- * Can't do this on Windows, postmaster will still hold the log file
- * open if the command was "pg_ctl start".
+ * We can't do this on Windows because it will keep the "pg_ctl start"
+ * output filename open until the server stops, so we do the \n\n above
+ * on that platform. We use a unique filename for "pg_ctl start" that is
+ * never reused while the server is running, so it works fine. We could
+ * log these commands to a third file, but that just adds complexity.
*/
- if ((log = fopen_priv(log_file, "a+")) == NULL)
+ if ((log = fopen_priv(log_file, "a")) == NULL)
pg_log(PG_FATAL, "cannot write to log file %s\n", log_file);
fprintf(log, "\n\n");
fclose(log);
#define SERVER_STOP_LOG_FILE SERVER_LOG_FILE
#else
#define SERVER_START_LOG_FILE "pg_upgrade_server_start.log"
-/* pg_ctl stop doesn't keep the log file open, so reuse UTILITY_LOG_FILE */
+/*
+ * "pg_ctl start" keeps SERVER_START_LOG_FILE and SERVER_LOG_FILE open
+ * while the server is running, so we use UTILITY_LOG_FILE for "pg_ctl
+ * stop".
+ */
#define SERVER_STOP_LOG_FILE UTILITY_LOG_FILE
#endif