No one in this world is pure and perfect. If you avoid people for their mistakes you will be alone. So judge less, love and forgive more.
**Live simply **Love generously **Care deeply **Speak kindly.
Ok all,
I’ve to talk to my collegues working with AWS to provide a best answer.
_________________________________
Cordialement, Pascal CROZET
DBA - Qualis Consulting
• www.qualis-consulting.com • 04 78 22 74 90
• Le Bois des Côtes 1 – Bâtiment A
• 300 Route Nationale 6 – 69760 LIMONEST
_________________________________
De : MichaelDBA
Envoyé le :mercredi 6 novembre 2019 20:32
À : girish R G peetle
Cc : PASCAL CROZET; pgsql-admin
Objet :Re: RE : PostgreSQL logical incremental backup for version 9.6 and above
Hi,
You can use pgbackrest to store WAL on AWS S3, but you need a binary backup from which to apply WAL to do PITR. pg_dump is not a binary backup. AWS RDS does not allow access to the underlying file system. So you cannot use pgbackrest to do backup or restore, or use the WAL you saved, let's say on S3, to do PITR.
Regards,
Michael Vitale
girish R G peetle wrote on 11/6/2019 2:26 PM:
Hi Pascal,Thanks for the suggestion. Looks like pgBackRest relies on WAL archive logs. But for Amazon RDS or Azure Database WAL logs are not accessible. We can only do pg_dump and logical replication.So pgBackRest won't work for my case.
ThanksGirish
On Wed, Nov 6, 2019 at 2:05 PM PASCAL CROZET <pascal.crozet@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi,
I think you can user pgBackRest
_________________________________
Cordialement, Pascal CROZET
DBA - Qualis Consulting
• www.qualis-consulting.com • 04 78 22 74 90
• Le Bois des Côtes 1 – Bâtiment A
• 300 Route Nationale 6 – 69760 LIMONEST
_________________________________
De : girish R G peetle
Envoyé le :mercredi 6 novembre 2019 18:03
À : pgsql-admin
Objet :PostgreSQL logical incremental backup for version 9.6 and above
Hi,I've a requirement to backup incremental data from PostgreSQL database server which are hosted as 'database as a service' like 'Amazon RDS' , Azure Database etc.
Full dump can be taken using pg_dump. But is there is a way to capture incremental changes to the database ? I read about logical replication slots which can be created for each database to capture incremental changes.But how do we know from where we should backup the SQL statements (as we need need skip those statements already backed up by pg_dump).
I thinking of following steps.Step 1: Create logical replication slotStep 2: Run pg_dump ( for full load ).Step 3: Capture the changes since last pg_dump using replication slot - How to know this information ?
Thanks in advance for any advise.
ThanksGirish