Thread

  1. Re: Proposal: Conflict log history table for Logical Replication

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2026-05-06T11:01:19Z

    On Wed, May 6, 2026 at 3:01 PM shveta malik <shveta.malik@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    > On Wed, May 6, 2026 at 9:24 AM vignesh C <vignesh21@gmail.com> wrote:
    > >
    > > Few comments:
    > > 1) Currently we allow renaming of pg_conflict schema, this might be ok
    > > as we allow other sysem schema like pg_catalog and pg_toast also.
    > > postgres=# alter schema pg_conflict rename to test_conflict;
    > > ALTER SCHEMA
    > >
    >
    > I agree that we allow renaming other schemas including pg_toast, but I
    > am not sure if this is consciously made decision, see BUG #18281 ast
    > [1]. I don't favour allowing renaming pg_conflict for 2 reasons:
    >
    > 1) Because Postgres explicitly blocks renaming schemas to a name
    > starting with 'pg_'. If an admin accidentally renames 'pg_conflict' to
    > something else, they are permanently locked out from renaming it back.
    >
    > 2) While the core worker might survive a rename via OID lookups;
    > external scripts, extensions, and monitoring tools will likely
    > hardcode the 'pg_conflict' string. If the schema is renamed, these
    > tools will fail.
    >
    
    I think we shouldn't go out of our way to disallow superusers to
    rename pg_conflict schema similar to other cases. We can try to
    prevent hard-coding schema names where possible but not sure we can
    guarantee that nothing related to pg_conflict schema won't break as
    shown by you in the following similar case for pg_conflict.
    
    > One such example  of scripts breaking is present event in Postgres. I
    > did the following, and most of psql commands started failing after
    > that due to hard-coded pg_catalog name in them.
    >
    > postgres=# alter schema pg_catalog rename to catalog_new;
    > ALTER SCHEMA
    >
    > postgres=# \d catalog_new.*
    > ERROR:  relation "pg_catalog.pg_class" does not exist
    > LINE 5: FROM pg_catalog.pg_class c
    >
    > [1]: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/18281-5b1b6c5991d345aa%40postgresql.org
    >
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.