pg_receivewalpg_receivewal1Applicationpg_receivewalstream write-ahead logs from a PostgreSQL serverpg_receivewaloptionDescriptionpg_receivewal is used to stream the write-ahead log
from a running PostgreSQL cluster. The write-ahead
log is streamed using the streaming replication protocol, and is written
to a local directory of files. This directory can be used as the archive
location for doing a restore using point-in-time recovery (see
).
pg_receivewal streams the write-ahead
log in real time as it's being generated on the server, and does not wait
for segments to complete like and
do.
For this reason, it is not necessary to set
when using
pg_receivewal.
Unlike the WAL receiver of a PostgreSQL standby server, pg_receivewal
by default flushes WAL data only when a WAL file is closed.
The option must be specified to flush WAL data
in real time. Since pg_receivewal does not
apply WAL, you should not allow it to become a synchronous standby when
equals
remote_apply. If it does, it will appear to be a
standby that never catches up, and will cause transaction commits to
block. To avoid this, you should either configure an appropriate value
for , or specify
application_name for
pg_receivewal that does not match it, or
change the value of synchronous_commit to
something other than remote_apply.
The write-ahead log is streamed over a regular
PostgreSQL connection and uses the replication
protocol. The connection must be made with a user having
REPLICATION permissions (see
) or a superuser, and
pg_hba.conf must permit the replication connection.
The server must also be configured with
set high enough to leave at least
one session available for the stream.
The starting point of the write-ahead log streaming is calculated when
pg_receivewal starts:
First, scan the directory where the WAL segment files are written and
find the newest completed segment file, using as the starting point the
beginning of the next WAL segment file.
If a starting point cannot be calculated with the previous method,
and if a replication slot is used, an extra
READ_REPLICATION_SLOT command is issued to retrieve
the slot's restart_lsn to use as the starting point.
This option is only available when streaming write-ahead logs from
PostgreSQL 15 and up.
If a starting point cannot be calculated with the previous method,
the latest WAL flush location is used as reported by the server from
an IDENTIFY_SYSTEM command.
If the connection is lost, or if it cannot be initially established,
with a non-fatal error, pg_receivewal will
retry the connection indefinitely, and reestablish streaming as soon
as possible. To avoid this behavior, use the -n
parameter.
In the absence of fatal errors, pg_receivewal
will run until terminated by the SIGINT
(ControlC)
or SIGTERM signal.
Options
Directory to write the output to.
This parameter is required.
Automatically stop replication and exit with normal exit status 0 when
receiving reaches the specified LSN.
If there is a record with LSN exactly equal to lsn,
the record will be processed.
Do not error out when is specified
and a slot with the specified name already exists.
Don't loop on connection errors. Instead, exit right away with
an error.
This option causes pg_receivewal to not force WAL
data to be flushed to disk. This is faster, but means that a
subsequent operating system crash can leave the WAL segments corrupt.
Generally, this option is useful for testing but should not be used
when doing WAL archiving on a production deployment.
This option is incompatible with --synchronous.
Specifies the number of seconds between status packets sent back to the
server. This allows for easier monitoring of the progress from server.
A value of zero disables the periodic status updates completely,
although an update will still be sent when requested by the server, to
avoid timeout disconnect. The default value is 10 seconds.
Require pg_receivewal to use an existing
replication slot (see ).
When this option is used, pg_receivewal will report
a flush position to the server, indicating when each segment has been
synchronized to disk so that the server can remove that segment if it
is not otherwise needed.
When the replication client
of pg_receivewal is configured on the
server as a synchronous standby, then using a replication slot will
report the flush position to the server, but only when a WAL file is
closed. Therefore, that configuration will cause transactions on the
primary to wait for a long time and effectively not work
satisfactorily. The option --synchronous (see
below) must be specified in addition to make this work correctly.
Flush the WAL data to disk immediately after it has been received. Also
send a status packet back to the server immediately after flushing,
regardless of --status-interval.
This option should be specified if the replication client
of pg_receivewal is configured on the
server as a synchronous standby, to ensure that timely feedback is
sent to the server.
Enables verbose mode.
Enables compression of write-ahead logs.
The compression method can be set to gzip,
lz4 (if PostgreSQL
was compiled with ) or
none for no compression.
A compression detail string can optionally be specified. If the
detail string is an integer, it specifies the compression level.
Otherwise, it should be a comma-separated list of items, each of the
form keyword or keyword=value.
Currently, the only supported keyword is level.
If no compression level is specified, the default compression level
will be used. If only a level is specified without mentioning an
algorithm, gzip compression will be used if the
level is greater than 0, and no compression will be used if the level
is 0.
The suffix .gz will automatically be added to
all filenames when using gzip, and the suffix
.lz4 is added when using lz4.
The following command-line options control the database connection parameters.
Specifies parameters used to connect to the server, as a connection string; these
will override any conflicting command line options.
The option is called --dbname for consistency with other
client applications, but because pg_receivewal
doesn't connect to any particular database in the cluster, database
name in the connection string will be ignored.
Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is
running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the
directory for the Unix domain socket. The default is taken
from the PGHOST environment variable, if set,
else a Unix domain socket connection is attempted.
Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
extension on which the server is listening for connections.
Defaults to the PGPORT environment variable, if
set, or a compiled-in default.
User name to connect as.
Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
password authentication and a password is not available by
other means such as a .pgpass file, the
connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
password.
Force pg_receivewal to prompt for a
password before connecting to a database.
This option is never essential, since
pg_receivewal will automatically prompt
for a password if the server demands password authentication.
However, pg_receivewal will waste a
connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
In some cases it is worth typing to avoid the extra
connection attempt.
pg_receivewal can perform one of the two
following actions in order to control physical replication slots:
Create a new physical replication slot with the name specified in
, then exit.
Drop the replication slot with the name specified in
, then exit.
Other options are also available:
Print the pg_receivewal version and exit.
Show help about pg_receivewal command line
arguments, and exit.
Exit Statuspg_receivewal will exit with status 0 when
terminated by the SIGINT or
SIGTERM signal. (That is the
normal way to end it. Hence it is not an error.) For fatal errors or
other signals, the exit status will be nonzero.
Environment
This utility, like most other PostgreSQL utilities,
uses the environment variables supported by libpq
(see ).
The environment variable PG_COLOR specifies whether to use
color in diagnostic messages. Possible values are
always, auto and
never.
Notes
When using pg_receivewal instead of
or
as the main WAL backup method, it is
strongly recommended to use replication slots. Otherwise, the server is
free to recycle or remove write-ahead log files before they are backed up,
because it does not have any information, either
from or
or the replication slots, about
how far the WAL stream has been archived. Note, however, that a
replication slot will fill up the server's disk space if the receiver does
not keep up with fetching the WAL data.
pg_receivewal will preserve group permissions on
the received WAL files if group permissions are enabled on the source
cluster.
Examples
To stream the write-ahead log from the server at
mydbserver and store it in the local directory
/usr/local/pgsql/archive:
$pg_receivewal -h mydbserver -D /usr/local/pgsql/archiveSee Also