You might find an answer in partitioning your data. There's a section
in the docs on it. Then you can just dump the old data from the
newest couple of partitions if you're partitioning by week, and dump
anything older with a simple delete where date < now() - interval '1
week' or something like that.
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TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to
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> So basically I need a dump/restore that only appends new
> data to the reports server database.
I guess that will all depend on whether or not your
data has a record of the time it got stuck in the cluster
or not ... if there's no concept of a time-stamp attached
to the records as they get entered I don't think it can be
done.
> Thanks
>
> Rob
Cheers,
Andrej
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On 9/3/07, Rob Kirkbride <rob.ki...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've got a postgres database collected logged data. This data I have to keep
> for at least 3 years. The data in the first instance is being recorded in a
> postgres cluster. This then needs to be moved a reports database server for
> analysis. Therefore I'd like a job to dump data on the cluster say every
> hour and record this is in the reports database. The clustered database
> could be purged of say data more than a week old.
>
> So basically I need a dump/restore that only appends new data to the reports
> server database.
>
> I've googled but can't find anything, can anyone help?
You might find an answer in partitioning your data. There's a section
in the docs on it. Then you can just dump the old data from the
newest couple of partitions if you're partitioning by week, and dump
anything older with a simple delete where date < now() - interval '1
week' or something like that.
That would be one option :}
If the server is on a Unix/Linux-platform you should be able
to achieve the result with a reasonably simple shell-script
and cron, I'd say.
> Rob
Cheers,
Andrej
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> I am on a Linux platform but I'm going to need some pointers regarding
> the cron job. Are you suggesting that I parse the dump file? I assume I
> would need to switch to using inserts and then parse the dump looking
> for where I need to start from?
The question is: how complex is the data you need to
extract? I guess where I was heading was to run a
select with the interval Scott described from psql into
a file, and then copy-from that into the analysis database.
However, if the structure is more complex, if you needed
to join tables, the parsing of a dump-file may be an option,
even though (always retaining a weeks worth) might make
that into quite some overhead.
Cheers,
Andrej
--
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Something that you may want to consider is dblink from contrib. We have a
similar situation for the archiving of collected data and have been able to
implement a fairly easy solution that does not require the parsing of dump
files, just a simple(ish) query based on the time inserted.
-Ken
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