Hi All,

Thanks for your suggestions.
One more questions is, how backups are useful if we have streaming replication 
. As I know, we can promote the standby as primary in case of disaster at 
primary side. Do we need to schedule backups if we have streaming replication?

Thanks

From: Avinash Kumar <avinash.vallar...@gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, October 18, 2019 5:28 PM
To: David Steele <da...@pgmasters.net>
Cc: Luca Ferrari <fluca1...@gmail.com>; Andreas Joseph Krogh 
<andr...@visena.com>; Daulat Ram <daulat....@exponential.com>; 
pgsql-general@lists.postgresql.org
Subject: Re: Postgres Point in time Recovery (PITR),

Hi Daulat,

PITR entirely depends on what type of backups you choose.
Sometimes, to reduce the amount of downtime involved while restoring and 
recovering a backup, you may also use a additional delayed standby.
You could use the PG built-in feature to delay the replication and fast-forward 
it to the safest point to achieve PITR. But this requires you to have an 
additional standby.
https://www.percona.com/blog/2018/06/28/faster-point-in-time-recovery-pitr-postgresql-using-delayed-standby/

If you have several TBs of database, pgBackRest is of course a way to go for 
backups (there are few more open source solutions), but also consider the 
amount of time it takes for recovery. Keeping all of this in mind, your 
approach to PITR changes.

So i would ask you this question, what is the backup tool you use and what is 
your backup strategy ? Are you taking a physical backup and performing 
continuous archiving of WALs ? The answer to your question entirely depends on 
this. :)

Regards,
Avinash Vallarapu.



On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 5:17 PM David Steele 
<da...@pgmasters.net<mailto:da...@pgmasters.net>> wrote:
On 10/18/19 11:29 AM, Luca Ferrari wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 10:30 AM Andreas Joseph Krogh
> <andr...@visena.com<mailto:andr...@visena.com>> wrote:
>> We use barman (https://www.pgbarman.org/) for continuous streaming backup 
>> and I had to restore from it once, and it went like this:
>
> Just for the records, here's an example of restore with pgbackrest:
>
> % sudo -u postgres pgbackrest --stanza=miguel \
>         --log-level-console=info --delta restore
> ...
> INFO: restore backup set 20190916-125652F
> INFO: remove invalid files/paths/links from /postgres/pgdata/11
> INFO: cleanup removed 148 files, 3 paths
> ...
> INFO: write /postgres/pgdata/11/recovery.conf
> INFO: restore global/pg_control (performed last
>                  to ensure aborted restores cannot be started)
> INFO: restore command end: completed successfully (5113ms)

pgBackRest also has a tutorial on PITR:
https://pgbackrest.org/user-guide.html#pitr

--
-David
da...@pgmasters.net<mailto:da...@pgmasters.net>



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