Re: Upgrade OS from Redhat AS3 (2.4 kernel) to AS4 (2.6)
От | Joshua D. Drake |
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Тема | Re: Upgrade OS from Redhat AS3 (2.4 kernel) to AS4 (2.6) |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 430683F3.3070309@commandprompt.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Upgrade OS from Redhat AS3 (2.4 kernel) to AS4 (2.6) - Advice on keeping PG happy? ("Roger Hand" <RHand@kailea.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: Upgrade OS from Redhat AS3 (2.4 kernel) to AS4 (2.6)
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Список | pgsql-general |
Roger Hand wrote: > Due to performance issues (which I wrote about on pg-performance list) > we will be upgrading our Redhat AS3.0 box (kernel 2.4) to Redhat AS4 > (kernel 2.6) in order to take advantage of the better I/O that the 2.6 > kernel offers. (I say upgrading but actually we'll wipe the box and > start fresh.) > > We are running Postgres 8.0.3. > > I had assumed we would have to backup/restore the entire db, but I got > to wondering if it would be possible to simply point the new Postgres > install to the existing db (the data itself is on a separate drive > array) and be back up and running without the time to do the restore. Yes as long as you are not switching architectures (say to x86_64) or filesystems you should be fine. I assume you will be running 8.0.3 on the new system as well. > > Is this a relatively simple matter? Or is it too hazardous and tricky > to bother with? Not hazardous at all as long as you don't accidently format the filesystem ;). Make a tar backup just in case. > > If it's possible I'd appreciate a list of what I'd need to save off > the old drive, where the os and Postgres program itself lived. Nothing. The postgresql.conf and pg_hba.conf will reside in the data directory so it will be fairly independent. Note that I am ONLY talking about postgres here. You may want to save things from the OS for other reasons. > > Also: Anything to watch out for with Postgres on 2.6 kernel as opposed > to 2.4? Any settings that should be different? We've been advised to > try "elevator=deadline". We write pretty much 24 hours a day, and have > I/O issues! Well 2.6 is pretty solid but I wasn't part of the thread so I can't tell you if this will solve your problem. I can say that overall 2.6 is much better for databases. Sincerely, Joshua D. Drake Command Prompt, Inc. > > -Roger
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