pg_dump vs pg_dumpall? which one to use to database backups?

daydreamer picture daydreamer · May 18, 2013 · Viewed 28.4k times · Source

I tried pg_dump and then on a separate machine I tried to import the sql and populate the database, I see

CREATE TABLE
ERROR:  role "prod" does not exist
CREATE TABLE
ERROR:  role "prod" does not exist
CREATE TABLE
ERROR:  role "prod" does not exist
CREATE TABLE
ERROR:  role "prod" does not exist
ALTER TABLE
ALTER TABLE
ALTER TABLE
ALTER TABLE
ALTER TABLE
ALTER TABLE
ALTER TABLE
WARNING:  no privileges could be revoked for "public"
REVOKE
ERROR:  role "postgres" does not exist
ERROR:  role "postgres" does not exist
WARNING:  no privileges were granted for "public"
GRANT

which means my user and roles and grant information is not in pg_dump

On the other hand we have pg_dumpall, I read conversation, and this does not lead me anywhere?

Question
- Which one should I be using for database backups? pg_dump or pg_dumpall?
- the requirement is that I can take the backup and should be able to import to any machine and it should work just fine.

Answer

Craig Ringer picture Craig Ringer · May 18, 2013

The usual process is:

  • pg_dumpall --globals-only to get users/roles/etc
  • pg_dump -Fc for each database to get a nice compressed dump suitable for use with pg_restore.

Yes, this kind of sucks. I'd really like to teach pg_dump to embed pg_dumpall output into -Fc dumps, but right now unfortunately it doesn't know how so you have to do it yourself.

Up until PostgreSQL 11 there was also a nasty caveat with this approach: Neither pg_dump, nor pg_dumpall in --globals-only mode would dump user access GRANTs on DATABASEs. So you pretty much had to extract them from the catalogs or filter a pg_dumpall. This is fixed in PostgreSQL 11; see the release notes.

Make pg_dump dump the properties of a database, not just its contents (Haribabu Kommi)

Previously, attributes of the database itself, such as database-level GRANT/REVOKE permissions and ALTER DATABASE SET variable settings, were only dumped by pg_dumpall. Now pg_dump --create and pg_restore --create will restore these database properties in addition to the objects within the database. pg_dumpall -g now only dumps role- and tablespace-related attributes. pg_dumpall's complete output (without -g) is unchanged.


You should also know about physical backups - pg_basebackup, PgBarman and WAL archiving, PITR, etc. These offer much "finer grained" recovery, down to the minute or individual transaction. The downside is that they take up more space, are only restoreable to the same PostgreSQL version on the same platform, and back up all tables in all databases with no ability to exclude anything.