Reputation: 1822
Do the REINDEX
statements below help with the restore operation or file size of the dump?
Could not find a question about this anywhere on SO or web. I'm using Postgres 9.4 and cleaning out a very large database with both truncate
and delete
statements on various tables.
The table data varies in type and size.
After this clean up operation, I immediately execute a pg_dump, tar and upload, then pg_restore. It's using the directory format with 12 jobs in parallel for dump, 8 for restore.
For example, these queries first:
TRUNCATE users;
DELETE FROM users_email WHERE active = 1;
REINDEX TABLE users;
REINDEX TABLE users_email;
Then:
$ pg_dump_9.4 --compress=0 -F directory -j 12 $DB_EXPORT_NAME -f $DB_DUMP_FOLDER 2>> operations.log
$ # do tar and upload with dump then:
$ pg_restore_9.4 -d $DB_IMPORT_NAME -j 8 $DB_DUMP_FOLDER 2>> operations.log
Upvotes: 0
Views: 515
Reputation: 247545
This will make no difference at all for pg_dump
or pg_restore
.
pg_dump
doesn't use the index at all, it just writes its definition as a CREATE INDEX
statement into the dump. The table itself is scanned sequentially.
pg_restore
creates the index using the CREATE INDEX
from the dump.
Upvotes: 2