-
-
Save antikytheraton/cd9b5640df3f3109d912c71f7f79c8a0 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Exporting and Importing Postgres Databases using gzip
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
# This is just a cheat sheet: | |
# On production | |
sudo -u postgres pg_dump database | gzip -9 > database.sql.gz | |
# On local | |
scp -C production:~/database.sql.gz | |
dropdb database && createdb database | |
gunzip < database.sql.gz | psql database |
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
# This guide shows you how to use gzip when pulling down a production database to your local environment | |
# | |
# A production database dump can be very large, like 1.5GB | |
# But database dumps contains a lot of empty space | |
# Gzipping the database can take the size from 1.5GB down to as low as 50MB | |
# But you are left zipping and unzipping all the time | |
# | |
# Follow these steps to avoid ever creating a large .sql file in the first place | |
# exporting and importing directly with the gzipped version | |
# For this example, the production server is named "production" | |
# On the production server: | |
# Navigate to your home directory. | |
# If this next command fails, it is because you don't have permission to switch to the postgres user | |
# If so, you will need to login as root before you can run this next command | |
sudo -u postgres pg_dump DATABASENAME | gzip -9 > DATABASENAME.sql.gz | |
# You should now have a file in your home directory, and you should be the owner | |
ls -alh ~/DATABASENAME.sql.gz | |
# You should see yourself as the owner | |
# $ -rw-r--r-- 1 brock users 45M Oct 15 12:00 DATABASENAME.sql.gz | |
# If you are not the owner, or if root is the owner, | |
# you'll need to change the ownership to yourself before you'll be able download it | |
# as root: | |
# chown YOUR_USERNAME_ON_PRODUCTION_SERVER: DATABASENAME.sql.gz | |
# Note the colon after your username | |
# Log out of the production server and go back to your local machine | |
# Use scp to download (-C uses compression for faster downloads) | |
scp -C production:~/DATABASENAME.sql.gz | |
# If you already have a local database, the .sql file might complain if you try to import it. | |
# This can be due to duplicate keys, or if the SQL import attempts to create the table that already exists, etc. | |
# Only delete the database if you are sure, but I do this all the time | |
# On OSX, run these commands | |
drop_db DATABASENAME | |
create_DB DATABASENAME | |
# On Linux, the commands are typically | |
dropdb DATABASENAME | |
createdb DATABASENAME | |
# Now re-import the database directly from the gzipped file: | |
gunzip < DATABASENAME.sql.gz | psql DATABASENAME | |
# The file remains gzipped both on prod and on your local copy |
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment