On 08/11/2007, Albe Laurenz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > We use a tape backup software that does "incremental backups" > as follows: > > - In a full backup, all files are backed up. > - In an incremental backup, only the files with modification > date after the last backup are backed up. > > Now when such a backup is restored, you first have to restore > the full backup, and then the incremental backup. > > The problem is that files which were deleted between the full > and the incremental backup will get "resurrected" after such a > restore. > > So if we perform our database backups with incremental > backups as described above, we could end up with additional > files after the restore, because PostgreSQL files can get > deleted (e.g. during DROP TABLE or TRUNCATE TABLE). > > My question is: > > Could such "resurrected" files (data files, files in > pg_xlog, pg_clog or elsewhere) cause a problem for the database > (other than the obvious one that there may be unnecessary files > about that consume disk space)? > > This will not work at all.
Try re-reading the instructions on backup in the manual. oh and always, always, always test your backup works before you actually need it! Peter Childs