magodo wrote: > OK... Just take another example: > > A B > BASE-----+-----+------o1 (recover to A) 1 > | | C > +.....|.......----+---o2 (regret, recover to B) 2 > | | > +...........|..------o3 (regret again, recover to C) 3 > | > +........---- 4 > > > Suppose I'm at "o3" and want to recover to point "C". Because I want to > recover to the first timeline which covers this time point, it means I > wish to recover to timeline 2. Ah, I finally understand your question. You assume tht timeline 1 and 2 have ended (that's how you drew it), and that consequently timeline 3 is the "earliest existing" timeline, so why doesn't PostgreSQL choose that one automatically? Even though you drew it that way, timeline 1 and 2 have not ended, in a way. There may be more on them. How should PostgreSQL know what is the last WAL entry on a certain timeline? For that, it would have to restore and examine *all* WAL segments on that timeline until that fails. But that is unreasonable because of the potential amount of time and work involved. Rather, PostgreSQL has to decide at the point where timeline 2 branches off which one it should follow. Yours, Laurenz Albe -- Cybertec | https://www.cybertec-postgresql.com