From 311bcfc6b3acdd6fd152798c7f287ddf74fa2a98 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Tue, 16 Apr 2024 21:46:48 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 15.4. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- doc/src/sgml/html/app-pgresetwal.html | 169 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 169 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/src/sgml/html/app-pgresetwal.html (limited to 'doc/src/sgml/html/app-pgresetwal.html') diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/html/app-pgresetwal.html b/doc/src/sgml/html/app-pgresetwal.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..24c243b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/src/sgml/html/app-pgresetwal.html @@ -0,0 +1,169 @@ + +pg_resetwal

pg_resetwal

pg_resetwal — reset the write-ahead log and other control information of a PostgreSQL database cluster

Synopsis

pg_resetwal [ -f | --force ] [ -n | --dry-run ] [option...] [ -D | --pgdata ]datadir

Description

+ pg_resetwal clears the write-ahead log (WAL) and + optionally resets some other control information stored in the + pg_control file. This function is sometimes needed + if these files have become corrupted. It should be used only as a + last resort, when the server will not start due to such corruption. +

+ After running this command, it should be possible to start the server, + but bear in mind that the database might contain inconsistent data due to + partially-committed transactions. You should immediately dump your data, + run initdb, and restore. After restore, check for + inconsistencies and repair as needed. +

+ This utility can only be run by the user who installed the server, because + it requires read/write access to the data directory. + For safety reasons, you must specify the data directory on the command line. + pg_resetwal does not use the environment variable + PGDATA. +

+ If pg_resetwal complains that it cannot determine + valid data for pg_control, you can force it to proceed anyway + by specifying the -f (force) option. In this case plausible + values will be substituted for the missing data. Most of the fields can be + expected to match, but manual assistance might be needed for the next OID, + next transaction ID and epoch, next multitransaction ID and offset, and + WAL starting location fields. These fields can be set using the options + discussed below. If you are not able to determine correct values for all + these fields, -f can still be used, but + the recovered database must be treated with even more suspicion than + usual: an immediate dump and restore is imperative. Do not + execute any data-modifying operations in the database before you dump, + as any such action is likely to make the corruption worse. +

Options

-f
--force

+ Force pg_resetwal to proceed even if it cannot determine + valid data for pg_control, as explained above. +

-n
--dry-run

+ The -n/--dry-run option instructs + pg_resetwal to print the values reconstructed from + pg_control and values about to be changed, and then exit + without modifying anything. This is mainly a debugging tool, but can be + useful as a sanity check before allowing pg_resetwal + to proceed for real. +

-V
--version

Display version information, then exit.

-?
--help

Show help, then exit.

+ The following options are only needed when + pg_resetwal is unable to determine appropriate values + by reading pg_control. Safe values can be determined as + described below. For values that take numeric arguments, hexadecimal + values can be specified by using the prefix 0x. +

-c xid,xid
--commit-timestamp-ids=xid,xid

+ Manually set the oldest and newest transaction IDs for which the commit + time can be retrieved. +

+ A safe value for the oldest transaction ID for which the commit time can + be retrieved (first part) can be determined by looking + for the numerically smallest file name in the directory + pg_commit_ts under the data directory. Conversely, a safe + value for the newest transaction ID for which the commit time can be + retrieved (second part) can be determined by looking for the numerically + greatest file name in the same directory. The file names are in + hexadecimal. +

-e xid_epoch
--epoch=xid_epoch

+ Manually set the next transaction ID's epoch. +

+ The transaction ID epoch is not actually stored anywhere in the database + except in the field that is set by pg_resetwal, + so any value will work so far as the database itself is concerned. + You might need to adjust this value to ensure that replication + systems such as Slony-I and + Skytools work correctly — + if so, an appropriate value should be obtainable from the state of + the downstream replicated database. +

-l walfile
--next-wal-file=walfile

+ Manually set the WAL starting location by specifying the name of the + next WAL segment file. +

+ The name of next WAL segment file should be + larger than any WAL segment file name currently existing in + the directory pg_wal under the data directory. + These names are also in hexadecimal and have three parts. The first + part is the timeline ID and should usually be kept the same. + For example, if 00000001000000320000004A is the + largest entry in pg_wal, use -l 00000001000000320000004B or higher. +

+ Note that when using nondefault WAL segment sizes, the numbers in the WAL + file names are different from the LSNs that are reported by system + functions and system views. This option takes a WAL file name, not an + LSN. +

Note

+ pg_resetwal itself looks at the files in + pg_wal and chooses a default -l setting + beyond the last existing file name. Therefore, manual adjustment of + -l should only be needed if you are aware of WAL segment + files that are not currently present in pg_wal, such as + entries in an offline archive; or if the contents of + pg_wal have been lost entirely. +

-m mxid,mxid
--multixact-ids=mxid,mxid

+ Manually set the next and oldest multitransaction ID. +

+ A safe value for the next multitransaction ID (first part) can be + determined by looking for the numerically largest file name in the + directory pg_multixact/offsets under the data directory, + adding one, and then multiplying by 65536 (0x10000). Conversely, a safe + value for the oldest multitransaction ID (second part of + -m) can be determined by looking for the numerically smallest + file name in the same directory and multiplying by 65536. The file + names are in hexadecimal, so the easiest way to do this is to specify + the option value in hexadecimal and append four zeroes. +

-o oid
--next-oid=oid

+ Manually set the next OID. +

+ There is no comparably easy way to determine a next OID that's beyond + the largest one in the database, but fortunately it is not critical to + get the next-OID setting right. +

-O mxoff
--multixact-offset=mxoff

+ Manually set the next multitransaction offset. +

+ A safe value can be determined by looking for the numerically largest + file name in the directory pg_multixact/members under the + data directory, adding one, and then multiplying by 52352 (0xCC80). + The file names are in hexadecimal. There is no simple recipe such as + the ones for other options of appending zeroes. +

--wal-segsize=wal_segment_size

+ Set the new WAL segment size, in megabytes. The value must be set to a + power of 2 between 1 and 1024 (megabytes). See the same option of initdb for more information. +

Note

+ While pg_resetwal will set the WAL starting address + beyond the latest existing WAL segment file, some segment size changes + can cause previous WAL file names to be reused. It is recommended to + use -l together with this option to manually set the + WAL starting address if WAL file name overlap will cause problems with + your archiving strategy. +

-u xid
--oldest-transaction-id=xid

+ Manually set the oldest unfrozen transaction ID. +

+ A safe value can be determined by looking for the numerically smallest + file name in the directory pg_xact under the data directory + and then multiplying by 1048576 (0x100000). Note that the file names are in + hexadecimal. It is usually easiest to specify the option value in + hexadecimal too. For example, if 0007 is the smallest entry + in pg_xact, -u 0x700000 will work (five + trailing zeroes provide the proper multiplier). +

-x xid
--next-transaction-id=xid

+ Manually set the next transaction ID. +

+ A safe value can be determined by looking for the numerically largest + file name in the directory pg_xact under the data directory, + adding one, + and then multiplying by 1048576 (0x100000). Note that the file names are in + hexadecimal. It is usually easiest to specify the option value in + hexadecimal too. For example, if 0011 is the largest entry + in pg_xact, -x 0x1200000 will work (five + trailing zeroes provide the proper multiplier). +

Environment

PG_COLOR

+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values + are always, auto and + never. +

Notes

+ This command must not be used when the server is + running. pg_resetwal will refuse to start up if + it finds a server lock file in the data directory. If the + server crashed then a lock file might have been left + behind; in that case you can remove the lock file to allow + pg_resetwal to run. But before you do + so, make doubly certain that there is no server process still alive. +

+ pg_resetwal works only with servers of the same + major version. +

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