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1 | 1 | <!--
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2 |
| -$Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/Attic/trouble.sgml,v 2.5 2000/03/31 03:27:41 thomas Exp $ |
| 2 | +$Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/Attic/trouble.sgml,v 2.6 2000/04/08 23:32:34 tgl Exp $ |
3 | 3 | -->
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4 | 4 |
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5 | 5 | <Chapter Id="trouble">
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@@ -137,6 +137,18 @@ FATAL 1: Database testdb does not exist in pg_database
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137 | 137 | Postgres username, which may or may not be the right thing.
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138 | 138 | </para>
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139 | 139 |
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| 140 | + <para> |
| 141 | + <ProgramListing> |
| 142 | +NOTICE: Unrecognized variable client_encoding |
| 143 | + </ProgramListing> |
| 144 | + This isn't an error; in fact, it's quite harmless. You'll see this |
| 145 | + message at startup if you use a client compiled with MULTIBYTE support |
| 146 | + to connect to a server compiled without it. (The client is trying |
| 147 | + to tell the server what character set encoding it wants, but the |
| 148 | + server has no idea what it's talking about.) If the message bothers |
| 149 | + you, use a client compiled with the same options as the server. |
| 150 | + </para> |
| 151 | + |
140 | 152 | </sect1>
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141 | 153 |
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142 | 154 | <sect1>
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