Index: doc/src/sgml/backup.sgml
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RCS file: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/backup.sgml,v
retrieving revision 2.58
diff -c -c -r2.58 backup.sgml
*** doc/src/sgml/backup.sgml	17 Mar 2005 05:10:11 -0000	2.58
--- doc/src/sgml/backup.sgml	17 Mar 2005 15:26:23 -0000
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*** 364,372 ****
    </para>
  
    <para>
!    If your database is spread across multiple volumes (for example,
!    if you are using tablespaces) there may not be any way
!    to obtain exactly-simultaneous frozen snapshots of all the volumes.
     Read your file system documentation very carefully before trusting
     to the consistent-snapshot technique in such situations.  The safest
     approach is to shut down the database server for long enough to
--- 364,374 ----
    </para>
  
    <para>
!    If your database is spread across multiple file systems there may not 
!    be any way to obtain exactly-simultaneous frozen snapshots of all 
!    the volumes.  For example, if your data files and WAL log on different 
!    file disks, or if tablespaces are on different file systems, it might
!    not be possible to use snapshots because the snapshots must be simultaneous.
     Read your file system documentation very carefully before trusting
     to the consistent-snapshot technique in such situations.  The safest
     approach is to shut down the database server for long enough to
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*** 375,385 ****
  
    <para>
     Another option is to use <application>rsync</> to perform a file
!    system backup.  First, while the database server is running, 
!    run <application>rsync</>, then shut down the database
!    server and perform a second <application>rsync</>, then
!    restart the database server.  This allows a file system backup to be
!    performed with minimal downtime.
    </para>
  
    <para>
--- 377,388 ----
  
    <para>
     Another option is to use <application>rsync</> to perform a file
!    system backup.  This is done by first running <application>rsync</>
!    while the database server is running, then shutting down the database
!    server just long enough to do a second <application>rsync</>.  The
!    second <application>rsync</> will be much quicker than the first,
!    but will be consistent because the server was down.  This method
!    allows a file system backup to be performed with minimal downtime.
    </para>
  
    <para>
