On the surface,
PGBackups
provides a way to capture regular backups of your
Heroku Postgres
database. However, because of its general-purpose architecture and use of standard PostgreSQL utilities, it’s also a useful tool capable of exporting to or importing from external PostgreSQL databases.
An alternative to using the dump and restore method of import/export if you have a Postgres instance on your local machine is to use the
pg:push
and
pg:pull
CLI commands to automate the process.
Export
PGBackups uses the native
pg_dump
PostgreSQL tool to create its backup files, making it trivial to export to other PostgreSQL installations. The resulting backup file uses the custom format option in
pg_dump
. As compared to the plain-text format, the custom format options result in backup files that can be much smaller.
In general, PGBackups are intended for moderately loaded databases up to 20 GB. Contention for the I/O, memory, and CPU needed for backing up a larger database becomes prohibitive at a moderate load and the longer run time increases the chance of an error that ends your backup capture prematurely. For databases that are larger than 20 GB, see
Capturing Logical Backups on Larger Databases
.
Capture and Download Backup with PGBackups
To export the data from your Heroku Postgres database, create a backup and download it:
Use any of the supported pg_dump options as needed, such as --schema or --table to create dumps of specific schemas or tables of your database. Read more about the supported options in the PostgreSQL documentation.
Restore to Local Database
Load the dump into your local database using the pg_restore tool. If objects exist in a local copy of the database already, you can run into inconsistencies when doing a pg_restore.
This process usually generates some warnings, due to differences between your Heroku database and a local database, but they’re generally safe to ignore.
If you’re using an old version of pg_restore, you can see an error such as pg_restore: [archiver] unsupported version (1.13) in file header when you try to run pg_restore. Ensure that the pg_restore version you’re using is up-to-date and compatible with the version of the exported database. You can check your version of pg_restore by running pg_restore --version.
You can optionally use the --jobs <number of jobs> flag with pg_restore to parallelise the restore of the dump. Only the custom and directory archive formats are supported with this option. More on this option can be found in the Postgres documentation.
Import
PGBackups can be used as a convenient tool to import database dumps from other sources into your Heroku Postgres database.
If you’re importing data as part of the initialization of a new application, you must first create and configure the app on Heroku before performing the import.
Create Dump File
Dump your local database in compressed custom format using the open source pg_dump tool:
# set the password in an environment variable
export PGPASSWORD=mypassword # linux/mac
set PGPASSWORD=mypassword # windows
# create the database dump
$ pg_dump -Fc --no-acl --no-owner -h localhost -U myuser -d mydb -f mydb.dump
Import to Heroku Postgres
In order for PG Backups to access and import your dump file, you must upload it somewhere with an HTTP-accessible URL.
The pg:backups restore command drops any tables and other database objects before recreating them.
The pg:backups:restore command expects the provided backup to use the compressed custom format. Other backup formats result in restore errors.
While Heroku PGBackups can download any backup files that are directly accessible through a URL, we recommend using Amazon S3 with a signed url. Generate a signed URL using the AWS console:
DATABASE_URL represents the HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_COLOR_URL of the database you wish to restore to. You must specify a database configuration variable to restore the database.
If you’re using a Unix-like operating system, make sure to use single quotes around the temporary S3 URL, because it can contain ampersands and other characters that confuse your shell. If you’re running Windows, you must use double-quotes.
When you’ve completed the import process, delete the dump file from its storage location if it’s no longer needed.