pg_restore: connecting to database for restore
pg_restore: creating SCHEMA public
pg_restore: creating COMMENT SCHEMA public
pg_restore: creating PROCEDURAL LANGUAGE plpgsql
pg_restore: creating TABLE appointments
pg_restore: executing SEQUENCE SET appointments_id_seq
pg_restore: restoring data for table "appointments"
pg_restore: setting owner and privileges for SCHEMA public
pg_restore: setting owner and privileges for COMMENT SCHEMA public
pg_restore: setting owner and privileges for ACL public
pg_restore: setting owner and privileges for PROCEDURAL LANGUAGE plpgsql
pg_restore: setting owner and privileges for TABLE appointments
From: Alvaro Herrera [mailto:alvherre@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Thu 4/20/2006 10:35 PM
To: Benjamin Krajmalnik
Cc: Tom Lane; pgsql-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [ADMIN] Howto: Using PITR recovery for standby replication
Benjamin Krajmalnik wrote:
> I am a newbie, so I
essentially invoked pg_dump from with pgAdmin3,
> with the defaults
(including large objects). This is the command
> being
issued:
>
> .C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\8.1\bin\pg_dump.exe
-i -h 172.20.0.32 -p 5432 -U postgres -F c -b -v -f "C:\Documents and
Settings\administrator.MS\testbk.backup" events
>
> What I
assumed was happening (and I may have very well been wrong) was
> that I
was getting a consistent backup of the object at the time that
> it was
processed, but not the database as a whole.
This command should produce a
consistent dump of all the objects in the
database. (Not a consistent
view of each object in isolation, which is
AFAIU what you are
saying.)
Next question is, how are you restoring this
dump?
--
Alvaro
Herrera
http://www.CommandPrompt.com/
PostgreSQL
Replication, Consulting, Custom Development, 24x7
support