Martin Langhoff wrote:
I have been following and experimenting a bit with PITR for a while, and I wonder whether it is practical to use the PITR hooks to roll back the database to a known state. The scenario is that I am developing a script that will be massaging data in a medium size database. A pg_restore of the pristine data takes ~35 minutes to complete, if I can take a snapshot right after pg_restore, and use it to later "rewind" to that point, I'll save 35 minutes every time I need to test it. The dev box where Pg runs has plenty of disk space to spare - and it'll be a dedicated Pg instance. I've already raised wal_buffers to 20000 and also disabled wal fsync. So my back-of-the-envelope plan is to - run pg_restore - setup wal archiving so that the logs aren't deleted - pg_start_backup('label'); cp -pr pgdata pgdata-snapshot ; pg_stop_backup('label') - somehow remeber the transaction identifier
If it's the only database in the cluster (or you can make it so) then it's probably simpler just to:
1. Get database to state you want 2. Stop postgresql 3. Take file-level backup of everything in $PGDATA 4. Restart postgresql 5. Run tests 6. Stop postgresql 7. Restore file-level backup 8. Go to step 4 -- Richard Huxton Archonet Ltd