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NAMEpg_combinebackup - reconstruct a full backup from an incremental backup and dependent backups SYNOPSISpg_combinebackup [option...] [backup_directory...] DESCRIPTIONpg_combinebackup is used to reconstruct a synthetic full backup from an incremental backup and the earlier backups upon which it depends. Specify all of the required backups on the command line from oldest to newest. That is, the first backup directory should be the path to the full backup, and the last should be the path to the final incremental backup that you wish to restore. The reconstructed backup will be written to the output directory specified by the -o option. pg_combinebackup will attempt to verify that the backups you specify form a legal backup chain from which a correct full backup can be reconstructed. However, it is not designed to help you keep track of which backups depend on which other backups. If you remove one or more of the previous backups upon which your incremental backup relies, you will not be able to restore it. Moreover, pg_combinebackup only attempts to verify that the backups have the correct relationship to each other, not that each individual backup is intact; for that, use pg_verifybackup(1). Since the output of pg_combinebackup is a synthetic full backup, it can be used as an input to a future invocation of pg_combinebackup. The synthetic full backup would be specified on the command line in lieu of the chain of backups from which it was reconstructed. OPTIONS-d
Print lots of debug logging output on stderr.
-n
The -n/--dry-run option instructs
pg_combinebackup to figure out what would be done without actually
creating the target directory or any output files. It is particularly useful
in combination with --debug.
-N
By default, pg_combinebackup will wait for all
files to be written safely to disk. This option causes pg_combinebackup
to return without waiting, which is faster, but means that a subsequent
operating system crash can leave the output backup corrupt. Generally, this
option is useful for testing but should not be used when creating a production
installation.
-o outputdir
Specifies the output directory to which the synthetic
full backup should be written. Currently, this argument is required.
-T olddir=newdir
Relocates the tablespace in directory olddir to
newdir during the backup. olddir is the absolute path of the
tablespace as it exists in the final backup specified on the command line, and
newdir is the absolute path to use for the tablespace in the
reconstructed backup. If either path needs to contain an equal sign (=),
precede that with a backslash. This option can be specified multiple times for
multiple tablespaces.
-k
Use hard links instead of copying files to the synthetic
backup. Reconstruction of the synthetic backup might be faster (no file
copying) and use less disk space, but care must be taken when using the output
directory, because any modifications to that directory (for example, starting
the server) can also affect the input directories. Likewise, changes to the
input directories (for example, starting the server on the full backup) could
affect the output directory. Thus, this option is best used when the input
directories are only copies that will be removed after pg_combinebackup has
completed.
Requires that the input backups and the output directory are in the same file system. If a backup manifest is not available or does not contain checksum of the right type, hard links will still be created, but the file will be also read block-by-block for the checksum calculation. --clone Use efficient file cloning (also known as
“reflinks” on some systems) instead of copying files to the new
data directory, which can result in near-instantaneous copying of the data
files.
If a backup manifest is not available or does not contain checksum of the right type, file cloning will be used to copy the file, but the file will be also read block-by-block for the checksum calculation. File cloning is only supported on some operating systems and file systems. If it is selected but not supported, the pg_combinebackup run will error. At present, it is supported on Linux (kernel 4.5 or later) with Btrfs and XFS (on file systems created with reflink support), and on macOS with APFS. --copy Perform regular file copy. This is the default. (See also
--copy-file-range, --clone, and -k/--link.)
--copy-file-range Use the copy_file_range system call for efficient
copying. On some file systems this gives results similar to --clone,
sharing physical disk blocks, while on others it may still copy blocks, but do
so via an optimized path. At present, it is supported on Linux and FreeBSD.
If a backup manifest is not available or does not contain checksum of the right type, copy_file_range will be used to copy the file, but the file will be also read block-by-block for the checksum calculation. --manifest-checksums=algorithm Like pg_basebackup(1), pg_combinebackup writes a
backup manifest in the output directory. This option specifies the checksum
algorithm that should be applied to each file included in the backup manifest.
Currently, the available algorithms are NONE, CRC32C, SHA224, SHA256, SHA384,
and SHA512. The default is CRC32C.
--no-manifest Disables generation of a backup manifest. If this option
is not specified, a backup manifest for the reconstructed backup will be
written to the output directory.
--sync-method=method When set to fsync, which is the default,
pg_combinebackup will recursively open and synchronize all files in the
backup directory. When the plain format is used, the search for files will
follow symbolic links for the WAL directory and each configured tablespace.
On Linux, syncfs may be used instead to ask the operating system to synchronize the whole file system that contains the backup directory. When the plain format is used, pg_combinebackup will also synchronize the file systems that contain the WAL files and each tablespace. See recovery_init_sync_method for information about the caveats to be aware of when using syncfs. This option has no effect when --no-sync is used. -V
Prints the pg_combinebackup version and exits.
-?
Shows help about pg_combinebackup command line arguments,
and exits.
LIMITATIONSpg_combinebackup does not recompute page checksums when writing the output directory. Therefore, if any of the backups used for reconstruction were taken with checksums disabled, but the final backup was taken with checksums enabled, the resulting directory may contain pages with invalid checksums. To avoid this problem, taking a new full backup after changing the checksum state of the cluster using pg_checksums(1) is recommended. Otherwise, you can disable and then optionally reenable checksums on the directory produced by pg_combinebackup in order to correct the problem. ENVIRONMENTThis utility, like most other PostgreSQL utilities, uses the environment variables supported by libpq (see Section 32.15). The environment variable PG_COLOR specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values are always, auto and never. SEE ALSOpg_basebackup(1)
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