On 11/20/20 3:39 PM, Adrian Klaver wrote:
On 11/20/20 1:00 PM, Ron wrote:
On 11/20/20 2:56 PM, Adrian Klaver wrote:
On 11/20/20 10:01 AM, Durumdara wrote:
Hello!
We need to log the pg_dump's state.
What objects are in copy, and what are the starting and ending times.
But when I try to redirect the output, the result doesn't have timestamps.
PG 11, on Windows.
As I see the -v option isn't enough to see the starting times.
For example:
2020-11-19 12:00:01.084 Dump table content table1
2020-11-19 12:03:12.932 Dump table content table2
...
etc.
If you are redirecting to a file it have the creation time that you can
use. Internally times don't really matter for the objects as the dump is
based on a snapshot. Said snapshot is based on visible transactions not
time. So for practical purposes they all occur at the same 'time'.
It makes all the difference when monitoring the progress of a backup.
With -v you will get running list of objects dumped, just not the time.
The time is only of value relative to the following. Progress will only be
measurable by determining what is left to run and the time for each
object. Not sure that is feasible as you would have to pre-run the dump to
get information about the number of objects and an estimate of the data
quantity involved and the effect of each on the other. I could see that
estimate getting worse the bigger the data set(and hence the more you
cared) got. Because at some point the load on the machine would affect the
output speed of the dump.
By knowing the sizes of the tables, and how long it takes to takes the first
"some" tables, then one can forecast how long it takes to backup the whole
database.
--
Angular momentum makes the world go 'round.