Ok, I’ve fixed it. I did the following
Enter container
./launcher enter app
Connect to database
su postgres -c 'psql discourse'
Try to find duplicates
discourse=# select * from incoming_referers where path LIKE '%/search/' ORDER BY incoming_domain_id;`
id | path | incoming_domain_id
------+------------+--------------------
3339 | /search/ | 33
6257 | /search/ | 91
1567 | /search/ | 298
1777 | /search/ | 341
3010 | /search/ | 418
6247 | /search/ | 418
4293 | /search/ | 644
2899 | /search/ | 653
3447 | /search/ | 793
3696 | /search/ | 852
4395 | /a/search/ | 1050
6968 | /search/ | 1305
5634 | /search/ | 1387
5834 | /search/ | 1437
6519 | /search/ | 1637
7127 | /search/ | 1787
7280 | /search/ | 1827
(17 rows)
Delete duplicate
DELETE FROM incoming_referers WHERE path LIKE '%/search/' AND id IN (6247);
Then rebuild
discourse=# REINDEX SCHEMA CONCURRENTLY public;
WARNING: cannot reindex invalid index "public.incoming_referers_pkey_ccnew" concurrently, skipping
WARNING: cannot reindex invalid index "public.index_incoming_referers_on_path_and_incoming_domain_id_ccnew" concurrently, skipping
WARNING: cannot reindex invalid index "pg_toast.pg_toast_20732_index_ccnew" concurrently, skipping
REINDEX
Then I took another backup, copied it to the new server, and it imported successfully ![]()
It would be nice if the backup process could spot duplicates to avoid any issues, I was luckily that I had access to the original server which was still running. If I was restoring a cold backup, this would probably have been more of an issue>
Thanks a lot for your help.