Actually, the affair had some good side: as usual I was checking my own designs first and looking for flaws, and indeed I found one: If you do copy out the archive logs not directly to tape, but to some disk area for further processing, then there is an issue with possible loss. If you do it like the docs say, with a command like this: archive_command = 'test ! -f /mnt/server/archivedir/%f && cp %p +/mnt/server/archivedir/%f' # Unix That "cp" is usually not synchronous. So there is the possibility that this command terminates successfully, and reports exitcode zero back to the Postgres, and then the Postgres will consider that log being safely away. But the target of the copy may not yet been written to disk. If at that point a power loss happens, the log may become missing/damaged/ incomplete, while the database may or may not consider it done when restarting. Therefore, mounting such a target filesystem in all-synchronous mode might be a good idea. (UFS: "-o sync", ZFS: "set sync=always") cheerio, PMc