Further to the below e-mail, I've come across a slight problem.
The starting checkpoint location in a backup I've just taken is "0/22A3190" (note: 7 digits after the /, not 6 as I first thought.) However the .backup file is called <WAL_FILE>.002A3190 (ie. it only takes the right-most 6 digits).

Can someone confirm this is the correct case?

Thanks,

Andy.


-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Checkpoint Location Format
Date:   Tue, 07 Nov 2006 13:12:53 +0000
From:   Andy Shellam (Mailing Lists) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:     pgsql-admin@postgresql.org



Hi,

I'm writing an automated file-system level backup application for use with WAL archiving, that will issue the pg_start_backup call, tar and gzip the cluster data directory, issue the pg_stop_backup call, and remove all previous un-needed WAL files from the archive.

I need to write a regular expression that will search for the WAL filename and checkpoint location from the backup_label file, and just want to clarify that the checkpoint location will always be of the format: X/XXXXXX - where X is one of 0-9, A-F?

And then the WAL .backup file that is generated in the archive, has a filename of the form:

<WAL_FILE>.00XXXXXX.backup

where <WAL_FILE> is the name of the "STARTING WAL LOCATION" directive in the backup_label file, and XXXXXX is the last 6 digits of the checkpoint (after the / )?

Thanks,

Andy.



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