On Mon, Sep 10, 2012 at 10:06 PM, Mike Christensen <mike@kitchenpc.com> wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 10, 2012 at 9:57 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
>> Jeff Janes <jeff.janes@gmail.com> writes:
>>> On Mon, Sep 10, 2012 at 5:27 PM, Mike Christensen <mike@kitchenpc.com> wrote:
>>>> Is there something that can be done smarter with this error message?
>>>>
>>>> pg_dump: dumping contents of table pages
>>>> pg_dump: [tar archiver] archive member too large for tar format
>>>> pg_dump: *** aborted because of error
>>
>>> There is no efficient way for it to know for certain in advance how
>>> much space the data will take, until it has seen the data. Perhaps it
>>> could make an estimate, but that could suffer from both false
>>> positives and false negatives.
>>
>> Maybe the docs should warn people away from tar format more vigorously.
>> Unless you actually have a reason to disassemble the archive with tar,
>> that format has no redeeming social value that I can see, and it
>> definitely has gotchas. (This isn't the only one, IIRC.)
>
> Gotcha. I ended up just using "plain" format which worked well, even
> though the file was about 60 gigs and I had to clear out some hard
> disk space first.
>
> Is the TAR format just the raw SQL commands, just tar'ed and then sent
> over the wire? It'd be cool if there was some compressed "binary"
> backup of a database that could be easily downloaded, or even better,
> a way to just move an entire database between server instances in one
> go.. Maybe there is a tool that does that, I just don't know about it
> :)
>
> Anyway, I'm all upgraded to 9.2. Decided I might as well since I'm
> launching my site in 3 weeks, and won't get another chance to upgrade
> for a while..
Oh reading the online docs, it looks like what I may have wanted was:
--format=custom
"Output a custom-format archive suitable for input into pg_restore.
Together with the directory output format, this is the most flexible
output format in that it allows manual selection and reordering of
archived items during restore. This format is also compressed by
default."
I take it this is one big file (with no size limits) that's compressed
over the wire. Next time I'll try this!
Mike