On Nov 9, 2007, at 8:52 AM, Tom Hart wrote:
I'm sure you guys have heard this about 100 times, and I've done
some research on Google and found out some things, but I still have
a couple questions.
As I'm sure you may have guessed from the subject, I'm trying to
schedule (under windows) pg_dumpall to run each night/morning/full
moon/whatever. The hitch in this is that it asks for a password for
each database as it dumps it. I know I can use the PGPASS
environment variable, or a ~/.pgpass file. What I'm wondering is
what's considered 'best practice' in practical applications. What
solutions do you guys use? Is it worth changing PGPASSFILE to point
to a different .pgpass?
Any of those approaches should be fine. I'd probably stick with the
default pgpass file, just for the sake of whoever may have to
maintain it next.
I tend to create a unix user just for doing backups and other
scheduled maintenance, then give that user access to the database via
ident authentication from the local system only. If PG-on-Windows has
equivalent functionality that's another approach to consider.
Cheers,
Steve
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