Greetings,

* Rich Shepard (rshep...@appl-ecosys.com) wrote:
> That's why I thought of copying the entire data/ directory.

That isn't going to work because things change in the data directory...

> >Also, I don't know what method you've been using to make file-level
> >backups, but they're really pretty worthless unless you (a) stop the
> >server or (b) use a filesystem snapshot. Otherwise you're very likely to
> >have inconsistent data.
> 
> I run dirvish <http://www.dirvish.org/> which runs each night starting at
> 00:30 am when there's no activity (by me, at least) on the database.

The database system is potentially doing things though, so this isn't a
backup solution that is reliable.  You really should be using a backup
solution that's been specifically written to work with PostgreSQL.

I wouldn't trust performing a restore from a backup taken like this.
I'd suggest you restore to a new server (or another directory, at
least...) and try starting up PG and then dump out the table and then
check that it's valid.

And then switch to a backup system that actually works with PG.

Thanks,

Stephen

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