Add pg_dump/restore item to FAQ.

Martijn van Oosterhout
This commit is contained in:
Bruce Momjian 2002-06-21 02:00:51 +00:00
parent d1fcd337e0
commit bed81bcbec
1 changed files with 22 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -81,6 +81,8 @@
clients"</I> when trying to connect?<BR>
<A href="#3.9">3.9</A>) What are the <I>pg_sorttempNNN.NN</I>
files in my database directory?<BR>
<A href="#3.10">3.10</A>) Why do I need to do a dump and restore
to upgrade PostgreSQL?<BR>
<H2 align="center">Operational Questions</H2>
@ -776,6 +778,26 @@
not if a backend crashes during a sort. If you have no backends
running at the time, it is safe to delete the pg_tempNNN.NN
files.</P>
<H4><A name="3.10">3.10</A>) Why do I need to do a dump and restore
to upgrade PostgreSQL?</H4>
<P>The PostgreSQL team tries very heard to maintain compatability across
minor releases. So upgrading from 7.2 to 7.2.1 does not require a dump a
restore. However, new features are continuously being adding and
sometimes this requires new fields to be added to system tables.
<P>These changes may be across many tables and so maintaining backward
compatability would be quite difficult. Thus, restoring from a dump is
required to make everything work.
<P>Note that the actual on-disk file format does not change very often,
a feature the pg_upgrade script uses quite successfully. There the dump
is used create the necessary information in the system tables. The data
files are then just copied across. This method is not as guarenteed as
the dump/restore method but when it works it can make upgrades very
efficient.
<HR>
<H2 align="center">Operational Questions</H2>