Simon Riggs wrote:
On Fri, 2009-05-15 at 22:56 +0900, Fujii Masao wrote:
OK, I probably understood your point. The timeline history files whose
timeline ID is larger than that of an oldest backup must not be deleted
from the archive. On the other hand, the smaller or equal one can be
deleted. Not all history files are necessary. So, if we don't keep older
backup, we probably can delete all files in the archive before
pg_start_backup().
Is my understanding right?
Heikki is right in one sense: if you do pg_start_backup() then for
*that* backup you do not need earlier files.
However, as you have pointed out, if you have *multiple* backups then
deleting history files may cause problems with an earlier backup.
Yes, just as deleting old WAL files.
It's standard practice to have >1 backup, so there is potential for
error and minimum is we must document that.
Rather than explaining the problem and the rules by which we can work
out exactly which history files to keep, I think it is safer to say that
we must keep all history files.
The rule for determining which history files need to be retained is the
same as for WAL files. Anything archived before pg_start_backup() was
called for the oldest backup you still want to be able to restore can be
deleted. And the alphabetical sorting property works with history files
as well, you can call pg_xlogfile_name(pg_start_backup()) and delete
anything < the return value from the archive.
--
Heikki Linnakangas
EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
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