On 07/04/2017 08:37 AM, Moreno Andreo wrote:
Il 04/07/2017 17:25, Tom Lane ha scritto:
Moreno Andreo <moreno.and...@evolu-s.it> writes:
Il 04/07/2017 16:51, Tom Lane ha scritto:
Pushing binary data around on Windows is always a hazardous proposition.
So what you are saying is "in the last 5 years you've been extremely
lucky?" :-)
Yup, particularly now that you mention moving the files between machines.
What did you do that with exactly?
Trying to answer your question (I hope I understood correctly, English is not my mother tongue) What I do is, given a database, to COPY every table to a file, and then pack them up in one with a zip (except this table, that's been excluded from compression for its size and consequent compression time), so my backup is made up by 2 files, one with "normal data" and one with the result of COPYing this table to a file.

A question that comes while I'm writing: but pg_dump with custom format is not using COPY with binary format?

A quick look through the source indicates to me that it is not using BINARY. Then again I am not a C programmer, so take that into account. It would stand to reason that it would not use BINARY as using pg_dump/pg_restore is supposed to be portable across OS, machine architecture and to a certain degree Postgres versions. COPY WITH BINARY would work against that:

https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/sql-copy.html

"The binary format option causes all data to be stored/read as binary format rather than as text. It is somewhat faster than the text and CSV formats, but a binary-format file is less portable across machine architectures and PostgreSQL versions.


Thanks
Moreno





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Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@aklaver.com


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