Re: Improve logical replication usability when tables lack primary keys
Dilip Kumar <dilipbalaut@gmail.com>
From: Dilip Kumar <dilipbalaut@gmail.com>
To: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Cc: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>, Postgres hackers <pgsql-hackers@lists.postgresql.org>
Date: 2025-12-15T03:28:20Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
On Tue, Nov 11, 2025 at 6:11 PM Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hi Amit, > > Thanks for asking. > > > On Nov 11, 2025, at 19:18, Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On Mon, Nov 10, 2025 at 1:36 PM Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com> wrote: > >> > >> * BACKGROUND > >> > >> This requirement comes from several users operating large deployments, particularly in HIS (Hospital Information Systems). The situation can be summarized as follows: > >> > >> - A central DB operations team maintains the main database and configures logical replication for all tables. > >> - Multiple third-party application vendors are allowed to create new tables in that database. > >> - Some of these newly created tables lack a primary key. Since logical replication with `REPLICATION IDENTITY DEFAULT` requires a primary key, such tables silently fail to replicate. > >> - The DB operations team must then spend significant effort identifying the affected tables and correcting them manually. > >> > > > > Can you share an example of how we silently fail to replicate? Won't > > in such cases UPDATE/DELETE will anyway raise an ERROR? > > > > Yes, UPDATE/DELETE will fail. That’s the easy case to expose the error. Actually my patch will allow the update/delete. > > However, some tables, like dictionary tables, they are important, but don’t have much update/delete, they may silently fail to replicate. But other than UPDATE/DELETE for what operation we need RI, I mean INSERT would work without any RI and UPDATE/DELETE will fail on the publisher itself without setting RI, so can you explain the exact case where it will silently fail to replicate? -- Regards, Dilip Kumar Google