PG_UPGRADECLUSTER(1) | Debian PostgreSQL infrastructure | PG_UPGRADECLUSTER(1) |
pg_upgradecluster - upgrade an existing PostgreSQL cluster to a new major version.
pg_upgradecluster [-v newversion] oldversion name [newdatadir]
pg_upgradecluster upgrades an existing PostgreSQL server cluster (i. e. a collection of databases served by a postgres instance) to a new version specified by newversion (default: latest available version). The configuration files of the old version are copied to the new cluster and adjusted for the new version. The new cluster is set up to use data page checksums if the old cluster uses them.
The cluster of the old version will be configured to use a previously unused port since the upgraded one will use the original port. The old cluster is not automatically removed. After upgrading, please verify that the new cluster indeed works as expected; if so, you should remove the old cluster with pg_dropcluster(8). Please note that the old cluster is set to "manual" startup mode, in order to avoid inadvertently changing it; this means that it will not be started automatically on system boot, and you have to use pg_ctlcluster(8) to start/stop it. See section "STARTUP CONTROL" in pg_createcluster(8) for details.
The newdatadir argument can be used to specify a non-default data directory of the upgraded cluster. It is passed to pg_createcluster. If not specified, this defaults to /var/lib/postgresql/newversion/name.
When upgrading to PostgreSQL 11 or newer, this option no longer allows to switch the encoding of individual databases. (pg_dumpall(1) was changed to retain database encodings.)
link and clone are shorthands for -m upgrade --link and -m upgrade --clone, respectively.
Some PostgreSQL extensions like PostGIS need metadata in auxiliary tables which must not be upgraded from the old version, but rather initialized for the new version before copying the table data. For this purpose, extensions (as well as administrators, of course) can drop upgrade hook scripts into /etc/postgresql-common/pg_upgradecluster.d/. Script file names must consist entirely of upper and lower case letters, digits, underscores, and hyphens; in particular, dots (i. e. file extensions) are not allowed.
Scripts in that directory will be called with the following arguments:
<old version> <cluster name> <new version> <phase>
Phases:
Failing scripts will abort the upgrade. The scripts are called as the user who owns the database.
pg_createcluster(8), pg_dropcluster(8), pg_lsclusters(1), pg_wrapper(1)
Martin Pitt <mpitt@debian.org>, Christoph Berg <myon@debian.org>
2023-10-02 | Debian |