On 5/10/2010 2:46 PM, Kynn Jones wrote:
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 1:33 PM, Greg Sabino Mullane <g...@turnstep.com
<mailto:g...@turnstep.com>> wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: RIPEMD160
> I would like to replicate the following Unix pipe within a Perl
script,
> perhaps using DBD::Pg:
>
>
> % pg_dump -Z9 -Fc -U <DB_USER> <FROM_DB> | pg_restore -v -d
<TO_DB> -p
> <SSH_TUNNEL_PORT> -h localhost -U <DB_USER>
>
> Of course, I can try to use Perl's system, and the like, to run
this pipe
> verbatim, but I this as a last-resort approach.
>
> Is there a more direct way?
...
If you simply want to avoid the pipes, you can think about calling
pg_dump
from the remote box, using a authorized_keys with a specific command
in it,
and other tricks...
I can work with pg_dump, I think. What I'm trying to avoid is the
SSH-tunneling, which I find too fragile for reliable automated operation.
My script can use DBI::connect to provide a password when connecting to
the remote host, so I can run regular SQL on the remote host via Perl
DBI without SSH-tunneling.
But I have not found a way for my script to provide a password when it
runs commands like dropdb, createdb, and pg_restore with the "-h <REMOTE
HOST>" flag. So I end up resorting to SSH-tunneling. This is what I'm
trying to avoid.
Your idea of having the remote host run the pg_dump is worth looking
into, although I'm reluctant because involving the remote host like this
would significantly complicate my whole set up.
Anyway, thanks!
~K
Ah, this one I have hit too. I have very large database updates to send
to the web boxes... and I'd sometimes loose connection mid way.
I changed the process to dump to file, then rsync the file to the dest,
then remote exec the restore via ssh.
-Andy
--
Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general