On Thu, Dec 15, 2011 at 10:28 AM, Adrian Klaver <adrian.kla...@gmail.com> wrote:
> The reason I pointed to the manual links is that there is a lot of good
> information in there. It deserves more than a skim:). Realistically, to get 
> the
> most out of the dump/restore process you need to know the options available on
> both sides of the procedure.  For instance the -C option to pg_dump, puts in
> command to create database on restore, saves the step of creating a database 
> on
> the other end.  The issues that may arise are most likely going to be generic 
> to
> the upgrade from 8.4 to 9.1. To get a handle on those it is best to read the
> Release Notes for the  covered versions, in particular the Migration section. 
> In
> this case the notes for 9.0 that cover the migration issues from 8.4 and the
> notes for 9.1 that cover same from 9.0. Not all the issues may affect you, it
> depends on what you have done in your database. What form of pg_dump you use 
> is
> up to you.  I will say, the custom format, -Fc, has some interesting features.
> One, it is compressed. Two, you can restore from it in full or pick and
> choose(within reason,see docs) those items you wish to restore without 
> resorting
> to cut and paste.

On Thu, Dec 15, 2011 at 10:28 AM, Adrian Klaver <adrian.kla...@gmail.com> wrote:
> The reason I pointed to the manual links is that there is a lot of good
> information in there. It deserves more than a skim:). Realistically, to get 
> the
> most out of the dump/restore process you need to know the options available on
> both sides of the procedure.  For instance the -C option to pg_dump, puts in
> command to create database on restore, saves the step of creating a database 
> on
> the other end.  The issues that may arise are most likely going to be generic 
> to
> the upgrade from 8.4 to 9.1. To get a handle on those it is best to read the
> Release Notes for the  covered versions, in particular the Migration section. 
> In
> this case the notes for 9.0 that cover the migration issues from 8.4 and the
> notes for 9.1 that cover same from 9.0. Not all the issues may affect you, it
> depends on what you have done in your database. What form of pg_dump you use 
> is
> up to you.  I will say, the custom format, -Fc, has some interesting features.
> One, it is compressed. Two, you can restore from it in full or pick and
> choose(within reason,see docs) those items you wish to restore without 
> resorting
> to cut and paste.

So after reading
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/interactive/backup-dump.html,

I'm not sure why the manual shows you in "24.1. SQL Dump" & then
directly after in 24.1.1, they explain how to restore with psql as you
advised me not to. I got my psql db_name < infile command directly
from the manual. I know it's personal preference but from everything
you noted, why didn't they just explain how to perform a pg_restore in
the "24.1.1. Restoring the Dump" section.

"24.1.3. Handling Large Databases" section is very cool but also
extremely vague IMO.

> Use pg_dump's custom dump format. If PostgreSQL was built on a system with 
> the zlib
> compression library installed, the custom dump format will compress data as 
> it writes it to
> the output file. This will produce dump file sizes similar to using gzip, but 
> it has the added
> advantage that tables can be restored selectively. The following command 
> dumps a
> database using the custom dump format:

So this seems helpful to myself in only that A: the dump is compressed
(my databases are generally small anyways) and B: I don't have to
create the database before I restore it. My only question is I see
that noted nowhere in the manual ... yet but I'm just wondering if
that's a correct statement.

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