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My custom branche(s) on git.pleroma.social/pleroma/pleroma
commit: d239bd3ca4348d38c12ab54c7e2e9cb2b825cc3c
parent 74be4de3f6c2c34447029649526637411acfa9f3
Author: feld <feld@feld.me>
Date:   Fri,  9 Oct 2020 14:25:24 +0000

Merge branch 'docs/improve-backup-restore' into 'develop'

#2219 Improve backup/restore documentation

See merge request pleroma/pleroma!3061

Diffstat:

Mdocs/administration/backup.md18+++++++++++-------
1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)

diff --git a/docs/administration/backup.md b/docs/administration/backup.md @@ -5,20 +5,24 @@ 1. Stop the Pleroma service. 2. Go to the working directory of Pleroma (default is `/opt/pleroma`) 3. Run `sudo -Hu postgres pg_dump -d <pleroma_db> --format=custom -f </path/to/backup_location/pleroma.pgdump>` (make sure the postgres user has write access to the destination file) -4. Copy `pleroma.pgdump`, `config/prod.secret.exs` and the `uploads` folder to your backup destination. If you have other modifications, copy those changes too. +4. Copy `pleroma.pgdump`, `config/prod.secret.exs`, `config/setup_db.psql` (if still available) and the `uploads` folder to your backup destination. If you have other modifications, copy those changes too. 5. Restart the Pleroma service. ## Restore/Move -1. Optionally reinstall Pleroma (either on the same server or on another server if you want to move servers). Try to use the same database name. +1. Optionally reinstall Pleroma (either on the same server or on another server if you want to move servers). 2. Stop the Pleroma service. 3. Go to the working directory of Pleroma (default is `/opt/pleroma`) 4. Copy the above mentioned files back to their original position. -5. Drop the existing database and recreate an empty one `sudo -Hu postgres psql -c 'DROP DATABASE <pleroma_db>;';` `sudo -Hu postgres psql -c 'CREATE DATABASE <pleroma_db>;';` -6. Run `sudo -Hu postgres pg_restore -d <pleroma_db> -v -1 </path/to/backup_location/pleroma.pgdump>` -7. If you installed a newer Pleroma version, you should run `mix ecto.migrate`[^1]. This task performs database migrations, if there were any. -8. Restart the Pleroma service. -9. Run `sudo -Hu postgres vacuumdb --all --analyze-in-stages`. This will quickly generate the statistics so that postgres can properly plan queries. +5. Drop the existing database if restoring in-place. `sudo -Hu postgres psql -c 'DROP DATABASE <pleroma_db>;'` +6. Restore the database schema and pleroma postgres role the with the original `setup_db.psql` if you have it: `sudo -Hu postgres psql -f config/setup_db.psql`. + + Alernatively, run the `mix pleroma.instance gen` task again. You can ignore most of the questions, but make the database user, name, and password the same as found in your backup of `config/prod.secret.exs`. Then run the restoration of the pleroma role and schema with of the generated `config/setup_db.psql` as instructed above. You may delete the `config/generated_config.exs` file as it is not needed. + +7. Now restore the Pleroma instance's data into the empty database schema: `sudo -Hu postgres pg_restore -d <pleroma_db> -v -1 </path/to/backup_location/pleroma.pgdump>` +8. If you installed a newer Pleroma version, you should run `mix ecto.migrate`[^1]. This task performs database migrations, if there were any. +9. Restart the Pleroma service. +10. Run `sudo -Hu postgres vacuumdb --all --analyze-in-stages`. This will quickly generate the statistics so that postgres can properly plan queries. [^1]: Prefix with `MIX_ENV=prod` to run it using the production config file.