>> I think you're pretty well screwed as far as getting it *all* back goes, >> but you could use pg_resetxlog to back up the NextXID counter enough to >> make your tables and databases reappear (and thereby lose the effects of >> however many recent transactions you back up over). >> >> Once you've found a NextXID setting you like, I'd suggest an immediate >> pg_dumpall/initdb/reload to make sure you have a consistent set of data. >> Don't VACUUM, or indeed modify the DB at all, until you have gotten a >> satisfactory dump. >> >> Then put in a cron job to do periodic vacuuming ;-) > > This might seem like a stupid question, but since this is a massive data > loss potential in PostgreSQL, what's so hard about having the > checkpointer or something check the transaction counter when it runs and > either issue a db-wide vacuum if it's about to wrap, or simply > disallow any new transactions? > > I think people'd rather their db just stopped accepting new transactions > rather than just losing data... >
I would certainly prefer the system to issue an error and stop working than complete data loss. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match