I can't change my expectations. It's either you do it or I won't certify you, 
and you won't be able to use the application.
That's how a certification body works, and there's nothing I can do about it.

 On Monday, January 26, 2026 at 01:23:05 PM GMT-5, Ron Johnson 
<[email protected]> wrote:

 On Mon, Jan 26, 2026 at 12:52 PM <[email protected]> wrote:I'm having a 
problem with this. I'm repurposing an old application written in Visual Basic 6 
that did allow backups through signed stored procedures.
You must change your expectations and way of thinking.  Postgresql is not SQL 
Server, and thus cannot be managed the same way as SQL Server.  That is a fact 
of life which you must accept. This is a requirement for financial 
applications; the user can perform a backup whenever they want, but they can't 
access the database.

"ssh to a Linux account dedicated to pgbackrest" within the application is my 
first thought.  Note, though, that pgbackrest does not have BACKUP DATABASE's 
COPY_ONLY feature.  If you need that, pg_dump is your only option.
The new application is web-based, deployed in containers, and the database 
server container is not the same as the application's, so I can't use pg_dump 
in the application, or at least I don't know how to do it.

 On Monday, January 26, 2026 at 12:31:48 PM GMT-5, Ron Johnson 
<[email protected]> wrote:


On Mon, Jan 26, 2026 at 11:11 AM Adrian Klaver <[email protected]> 
wrote:

On 1/26/26 08:01, [email protected] wrote:

> Is there a way to implement the SQL Server command 'BACKUP DATABASE'?

Not from within the Postgres instance.

You will need to use:

https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/app-pgdump.html

Felix, pg_dump is a logical export tuned for speed and multithreading.  Almost 
certainly not what you want.

pgbackrest is the equivalent of BACKUP DATABASE and BACKUP LOG.  It's an 
external program (stuffing everything in the database engine is not The Unix 
Way) which typically you run from cron. Redrirect stdout and stderr to a log 
file with a timestamp in the name.  (That, at least, is what I've been doing 
for 8 years.  It works perfectly.)

pgbackrest also has an "info" option which gives you details of all the backups 
currently in the repository. >
> Is there a way to see the restores performed on a database?
> Is there an equivalent table to msdb.dbo.restorehistory in SQL Server?
> Is there a way to implement an equivalent if one doesn't exist?
 From what I understand there are various ways of doing this in SQL
Server, which way are you interested in?
--
Death to <Redacted>, and butter sauce.Don't boil me, I'm still alive.
<Redacted> lobster!


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