> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- > Von: Laurenz Albe <laurenz.albe@xxxxxxxxxxx> > Gesendet: Freitag, 6. Januar 2023 06:28 > An: Zwettler Markus (OIZ) <Markus.Zwettler@xxxxxxxxxx>; pgsql- > general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Betreff: [Extern] Re: postgres restore & needed history files > > On Tue, 2023-01-03 at 16:03 +0000, Zwettler Markus (OIZ) wrote: > > We are using a DIY Postgres backup: > > --- > > psql -c "select pg_start_backup ('Full');" > > save -s "${NSR_SERVER}" -g "${NSR_POOL}" "${PGDATA}" > > psql -c "select pg_stop_backup();" > > --- > > The pg_wal directory is not saved with it because it is a linked directory. > > > > > > After some time, we had to perform a point-in-time recovery of 1 of the 5 > databases to a point in time 7 days in the past. > > We tried to perform a point-in-time restore on another host, which did not work > until we copied the contents of the current pg_wal directory. > > The current pg_wal directory included 8 history files: 00000002.history to > 00000009.history. > > The point-in-time restore worked smoodly after it had all these history files. > > > > > > Afaik, all necessary history files should also be restored by the > restore_command. > > I had a look at our archived wal backups and found that 00000002.history to > 00000008.history files already had been deleted due to our NSR backup retention > of 30 days. > > > > Question: Is it necessary to retain all history files? > > Yes, the history files are an integral part of the database. > You must not delete them from your WAL archive. > > Yours, > Laurenz Albe > -- > Cybertec | https://www.cybertec-postgresql.com > What would you do in case of a disaster when all history files in pg_wal are gone and also deleted in the backup due to the backup retention? Thanks, Markus