You don't need to create an intermediate file. You can do
pg_dump -C -h localhost -U localuser dbname | psql -h remotehost -U remoteuser dbname
or
pg_dump -C -h remotehost -U remoteuser dbname | psql -h localhost -U localuser dbname
using psql
or pg_dump
to connect to a remote host.
With a big database or a slow connection, dumping a file and transfering the file compressed may be faster.
As Kornel said there is no need to dump to a intermediate file, if you want to work compressed you can use a compressed tunnel
pg_dump -C dbname | bzip2 | ssh remoteuser@remotehost "bunzip2 | psql dbname"
or
pg_dump -C dbname | ssh -C remoteuser@remotehost "psql dbname"
but this solution also requires to get a session in both ends.
Note: pg_dump
is for backing up and psql
is for restoring. So, the first command in this answer is to copy from local to remote and the second one is from remote to local. More -> https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.6/app-pgdump.html
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