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# PostgreSQL maintenance
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This document shows you how to perform various maintenance tasks related to the Postgres database server used by Matrix.
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Table of contents:
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- [Getting a database terminal](#getting-a-database-terminal), for when you wish to execute SQL queries
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- [Backing up PostgreSQL](#backing-up-postgresql), for when you wish to make a backup
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- [Upgrading PostgreSQL](#upgrading-postgresql), for upgrading to new major versions of PostgreSQL. Such **manual upgrades are sometimes required**.
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## Getting a database terminal
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You can use the `/usr/local/bin/matrix-postgres-cli` tool to get interactive terminal access ([psql](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/11/app-psql.html)) to the PostgreSQL server.
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If you are using an [external Postgres server](configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md), the above tool will not be available.
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## Backing up PostgreSQL
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To make a back up of the current PostgreSQL database, make sure it's running and then execute a command like this on the server:
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```bash
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docker run \
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--rm \
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--network matrix \
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--env-file=/matrix/postgres/env-postgres-psql \
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postgres:11.1-alpine \
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pg_dump -h matrix-postgres \
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| gzip -c \
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> /postgres.sql.gz
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```
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If you are using an [external Postgres server](configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md), the above command will not work, because the credentials file (`/matrix/postgres/env-postgres-psql`) is not available.
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## Upgrading PostgreSQL
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Unless you are using an [external Postgres server](configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md), this playbook initially installs Postgres for you.
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Once installed, the playbook attempts to preserve the Postgres version it starts with.
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This is because newer Postgres versions cannot start with data generated by older Postgres versions.
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Upgrades must be performed manually.
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This playbook can upgrade your existing Postgres setup with the following command:
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ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=upgrade-postgres
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**The old Postgres data directory is backed up** automatically, by renaming to `/matrix/postgres-auto-upgrade-backup`.
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To rename to a different path, pass some extra flags to the command above, like this: `--extra-vars="postgres_auto_upgrade_backup_data_path=/another/disk/matrix-postgres-before-upgrade"`
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The auto-upgrade-backup directory stays around forever, until you **manually decide to delete it**.
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As part of the upgrade, the database is dumped to `/tmp`, an upgraded and empty Postgres server is started, and then the dump is restored into the new server.
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To use a different directory for the dump, pass some extra flags to the command above, like this: `--extra-vars="postgres_dump_dir=/directory/to/dump/here"`
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**ONLY one database is migrated** (the one specified in `matrix_postgres_db_name`, named `homeserver` by default).
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If you've created other databases in that database instance (something this playbook never does and never advises), data will be lost.
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# Upgrading PostgreSQL
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If you're not using an external Postgres server, this playbook initially installs Postgres for you.
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Once installed like that, this playbook attempts to preserve the Postgres version it starts with.
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This is because newer Postgres versions cannot start with data generated by older Postgres versions.
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An upgrade must be performed.
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This playbook can upgrade your existing Postgres setup with the following command:
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ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=upgrade-postgres
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**The old Postgres data directory is backed up** by renaming to `/matrix/postgres-auto-upgrade-backup`, by default.
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To rename to a different path, pass some extra flags to the command above, like this: `--extra-vars="postgres_auto_upgrade_backup_data_path=/another/disk/matrix-postgres-before-upgrade"`
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The auto-upgrade-backup directory stays around forever, until you **manually decide to delete it**.
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As part of the upgrade, the database is dumped to `/tmp`, upgraded and then restored from that dump.
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To use a different directory, pass some extra flags to the command above, like this: `--extra-vars="postgres_dump_dir=/directory/to/dump/here"`
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**ONLY one database is migrated** (the one specified in `matrix_postgres_db_name`, named `homeserver` by default).
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If you've created other databases in that database instance (something this playbook never does and never advises), data will be lost.
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Reference in new issue