Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us> writes:

> Alban Hertroys <alban.hertr...@apollovredestein.com> writes:
>
>> Our current development database server is running a bit low on diskspace, 
>> so I dropped an old but rather large database with the intention of 
>> claiming back some space. However, the space remains claimed.
>> This server was upgraded from PG10 to PG11 using pg_upgrade's --link 
>> option.
>
> If you used --link, then all the files would remain hard-linked from both
> the old and new database directories.  You've got to remove them from the
> old DB directory as well.
>
> There's not really any point in keeping around the source DB directory
> once you've completed a --link migration.  Starting the postmaster in
> the old DB directory would be disastrous because the files are
> inconsistent from its standpoint once the new postmaster has modified
> them at all.  (In fact, I think pg_upgrade intentionally makes the old
> directory non-runnable to prevent that error.)  So you might as well

Yeah.  IIRC, it renames control to pg_control.old to avoid accidental
startup.

> just "rm -rf ./10", not only its biggest subdirectory.
>
>                       regards, tom lane
>
>

-- 
Jerry Sievers
Postgres DBA/Development Consulting
e: postgres.consult...@comcast.net

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