On 2/16/07, Andy Shellam (Mailing Lists) <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


Why bother trying to delete WAL files older than the .backup file?  When
PostgreSQL is in recovery mode it knows which WAL files are necessary to
perform the recovery.

Also, the documentation recommends excluding the pg_xlog directory when
performing the base backup.  Likely when it comes time to recovery the
online WAL files have been archived already, so it is a risk of confusion I
am sure.


If the OP is doing the same as myself, the WAL files are being archived
outside of pg_xlog (indeed outside of the PG data cluster) - it makes no
sense keeping around WAL files older than the .backup file because they're
not needed - in a day I generate ~5GB worth of WAL files which aren't needed
after the full backup runs at 2am, so it's a waste of resources to keep them
around or to worry about backing them up after this time.



I mentioned this in my other response, the only reason I ask is because of
the potential need to recover from an earlier base backup up to a specific
point -- perhaps before the most recent base backup.  Personally I don't
think it is a good idea for every environment to do this, but I can see the
value in it and if you truly feel it is unnecessary then I can certainly
respect that.  Perhaps I am a bit too paranoid :), but I have seen people
foolishly do a huge cleanup and then take a backup and realize "Oh crap, I
did too much!" -- and if you don't have all the WAL files you certainly
can't guarantee a specific PITR.


--
Chad
http://www.postgresqlforums.com/

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