pg_resetxlog1Applicationpg_resetxlogreset the write-ahead log and other control information of a PostgreSQL database clusterpg_resetxlogpg_resetxlogoidxidxid_epochmxidmxofftimelineid,fileid,segdatadirDescriptionpg_resetxlog clears the write-ahead log (WAL) and
optionally resets some other control information stored in the
pg_control> file. This function is sometimes needed
if these files have become corrupted. It should be used only as a
last resort, when the server will not start due to such corruption.
After running this command, it should be possible to start the server,
but bear in mind that the database might contain inconsistent data due to
partially-committed transactions. You should immediately dump your data,
run initdb>, and reload. After reload, check for
inconsistencies and repair as needed.
This utility can only be run by the user who installed the server, because
it requires read/write access to the data directory.
For safety reasons, you must specify the data directory on the command line.
pg_resetxlog does not use the environment variable
PGDATA>.
If pg_resetxlog complains that it cannot determine
valid data for pg_control>, you can force it to proceed anyway
by specifying the
The
The
-n> (no operation) option instructs
pg_resetxlog to print the values reconstructed from
pg_control> and then exit without modifying anything.
This is mainly a debugging tool, but can be useful as a sanity check
before allowing pg_resetxlog to proceed for real.
The
-V> and
--version> options print
the pg_resetxlog version and exit. The
options
-?> and
--help> show supported arguments,
and exit.
Notes
This command must not be used when the server is
running. pg_resetxlog will refuse to start up if
it finds a server lock file in the data directory. If the
server crashed then a lock file might have been left
behind; in that case you can remove the lock file to allow
pg_resetxlog to run. But before you do
so, make doubly certain that there is no server process still alive.