Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'capistrano3-postgres', require: false
or:
gem 'capistrano3-postgres', require: false, group: :development
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install capistrano3-postgres
Capistrano3::Postgres supports Dotenv and Figaro gems and automatically loads environment variables from .env
/application.yml
files if they are used in the project.
# Capfile
require 'capistrano3/postgres'
then you can use cap -vT
to list tasks
cap postgres:backup:create # Creates dump of a database(By default stores it to ../shared/postgres_backup directory)
cap postgres:backup:download # Downloads dump to local server(By default stores file in ./tmp/postgres_backup directory)
cap postgres:backup:import # Imports last dump file to local database of your choice.
cap postgres:replicate # Performs create, download and import step by step.
You will be prompted for password and local database name that you want to use for restore. In most cases you will need to provide environment
cap production postgres:replicate
Sometimes it's a good idea to create dump before each deploy.
before 'deploy:starting', 'postgres:backup:create'
All downloaded dump files will be deleted after importing. If you want to keep them, you can set:
set :postgres_keep_local_dumps, 5 # Will keep 5 last dump files.
To save on disk space, you can set the compression level. Gzip 0-9 are supported, default is 0:
set :postgres_backup_compression_level, 6 # Will use gzip level 6 to compress the output.
If you are using different clusters:
set :postgres_remote_cluster, '9.6/main'
If you don't need one or more tables dumped:
set :postgres_backup_exclude_table, ['personal_data', 'logs'] # Will not dump tables
set :postgres_backup_exclude_table_data, -> { ['personal_data', 'logs'] } # Will not dump data for this tables
If you need only specific tables to be dumped:
set :postgres_backup_table, -> { ['users', 'orders'] }
- Fork it ( http://github.com/spilin/capistrano3-postgres/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request