PostgreSQL comes with two command-line utilities for dumping and then
restoring a database -- pg_dump
and pg_restore
, respectively.
Using the pg_dump
with the -Fc
flag will create a dump of the given
database in a custom format. The output of this command can be redirected
into a file (the .dump
extension is a standard convention):
$ pg_dump -Fc my_database > my_database.dump
Using the custom format option provides a couple benefits. The output is significantly compressed in comparison to a generic SQL dump. The dump and restoration is more flexible. Lastly, the dump can be performed in parallel if your machine has multiple cores to work with. Likewise, the restoration can be done in parallel with multiple jobs.
To restore the dump, create a fresh database and then use pg_restore
:
$ createdb my_new_database
$ pg_restore -d my_new_database my_database.dump
Note: the dumped tables will depend on some user role. You will need to
ensure that this role exists on the database cluster where the restore is
happening. You can use the createuser
command if necessary.
See the
pg_dump
docs
and pg_restore
docs
for more details.