Re: Suggestion on Backup

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Thank you Gabriele & all for your suggestions. 
I'm going to review them.

-----Original Message-----
From: Gabriele Bartolini [mailto:Gabriele.Bartolini@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 16, 2013 2:51 AM
To: Jeni Fifrick
Cc: pgsql-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re:  Suggestion on Backup

 Hi Jen,

 On Tue, 15 Oct 2013 21:09:50 +0000, Jeni Fifrick <jfifrick@xxxxxxxxxx>
 wrote:
> We're having Master & Slave Postgres 9.1.3 on CentOS - using Streaming 
> Replication, which serve as a read-only database, and as 'backup' for 
> the production database.

 Sure.

> I'm trying to setup a process that can be used to have the continuous 
> backup of the production, to make sure if some problems happen on the 
> production server, we won't loss the data.

 It is important that you understand though that such an architecture  (with just replication) won't completely protect you from disasters  happening on the master. I am referring to data loss caused by  undeliberate DELETE or DROP operations, for example, or SQL injections. 
 Especially if you have a streaming replicated standby, data that  disappears on the master will disappear from the standby immediately  after.

 Physical backup and continuous archiving will add this kind of  protection to your system. Using 9.1 unfortunately you can't benefit  from cascading replication using the streaming protocol (introduced in  9.2), however you can look into the pg_basebackup utility for this  purpose.

 Otherwise, there are tools out there that help you achieving these  goals, such as OmniPITR (https://github.com/omniti-labs/omnipitr),
 pg-rman (http://code.google.com/p/pg-rman/), WAL-E  (https://github.com/heroku/WAL-E, mainly for Amazon AWS users) and  barman (http://www.pgbarman.org/) - to name a few.

 Being one of the developers, I can definitely recommend Barman. It does  not yet support streaming replication, but usually with WAL file  shipping you can still achieve very good results in terms of Recovery  Point Objective (which measures data loss). It is very easy to setup,  and already has packages for CentOS.

 I hope this helps.

 Cheers,
 Gabriele
--
  Gabriele Bartolini - 2ndQuadrant Italia
  PostgreSQL Training, Services and Support
  Gabriele.Bartolini@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx - www.2ndQuadrant.it


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