On 10/16/07, jooy <oldatum@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 10/16/07, Richard Huxton <dev@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > jooy wrote: > > > Hello all, > > > We have a serious problem. Out dedicated server was hacked last > > > Sunday. And technical support used a new hard drive with new-installed > > > centOS to build our new server. Unfortunately, we don't have database > > > backup(pg_dump). We only have the old drive mounted and access normal > > > files. Is there any way we can just use those files to restore the > > > database? If we can, How? Any input are extremely welcome. > > > > You need an old copy of Postgesql - the same version you previously had. > > It should also have the same build-options. The simplest solution would > > probably be to do a minimal install of your old O.S. (a previous version > > of CentOS) and then the relevant version of PostgreSQL. > > > > If there's an RPM with the right version of PostgreSQL for your current > > CentOS, you could try that, but take a filesystem backup first. > > Thanks so much. We now have CentOS and postgresql ready. But we are > missing the backup files, that's, we haven't done pg_dump our > database. How to restore the database from some files like using mdb > file to restore a Access database? Is it possible in Postgres? I am > new to Postgres. Your help will be appreciated. I think you misunderstand. He's saying to make a FILE system backup of what's there now (i.e. cp -rp /where/my/db/is/now /where/i/backup/files) before trying to bring up a postgresql instance on the files as they are now. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: don't forget to increase your free space map settings