Re: row filtering for logical replication
Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com>
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the thread's linked commits as JSON, with link sources.
API reference →
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Release cache tuple when no longer needed
- ed0fbc8e5ac9 15.0 landed
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Add some additional tests for row filters in logical replication.
- ceb57afd3ce1 15.0 landed
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Fix one of the tests introduced in commit 52e4f0cd47.
- cfb4e209ec15 15.0 landed
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Allow specifying row filters for logical replication of tables.
- 52e4f0cd472d 15.0 landed
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Move scanint8() to numutils.c
- cfc7191dfea3 15.0 cited
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Replace Test::More plans with done_testing
- 549ec201d613 15.0 cited
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Reduce relcache access in WAL sender streaming logical changes
- 6ce16088bfed 15.0 cited
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Small cleanups related to PUBLICATION framework code
- c9105dd3660f 15.0 cited
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Add a view to show the stats of subscription workers.
- 8d74fc96db5f 15.0 cited
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Allow publishing the tables of schema.
- 5a2832465fd8 15.0 cited
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Doc: improve documentation of CREATE/ALTER SUBSCRIPTION.
- 1882d6cca161 15.0 cited
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Add PublicationTable and PublicationRelInfo structs
- 0c6828fa987b 15.0 cited
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Remove unused argument "txn" in maybe_send_schema().
- 93d573d86571 15.0 cited
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Add prepare API support for streaming transactions in logical replication.
- 63cf61cdeb7b 15.0 cited
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Unify PostgresNode's new() and get_new_node() methods
- 201a76183e20 15.0 cited
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Use l*_node() family of functions where appropriate
- 2b00db4fb0c7 15.0 cited
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Add support for prepared transactions to built-in logical replication.
- a8fd13cab0ba 15.0 cited
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Restore the portal-level snapshot after procedure COMMIT/ROLLBACK.
- ef9480509622 11.13 cited
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Rename a parse node to be more general
- 91d1f2d30210 14.0 landed
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Remove unused column atttypmod from initial tablesync query
- 4ad31bb2ef25 14.0 landed
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SEARCH and CYCLE clauses
- 3696a600e229 14.0 cited
On 11/23/18 8:03 PM, Stephen Frost wrote: > Greetings, > > * Fabrízio de Royes Mello (fabriziomello@gmail.com) wrote: >> On Fri, Nov 23, 2018 at 4:13 PM Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com> >> wrote: >>>> If carefully documented I see no problem with it... we already have an >>>> analogous problem with functional indexes. >>> >>> The difference is that with functional indexes you can recreate the >>> missing object and everything is okay again. With logical replication >>> recreating the object will not help. >>> >> >> In this case with logical replication you should rsync the object. That is >> the price of misunderstanding / bad use of the new feature. >> >> As usual, there are no free beer ;-) > > There's also certainly no shortage of other ways to break logical > replication, including ways that would also be hard to recover from > today other than doing a full resync. > Sure, but that seems more like an argument against creating additional ones (and for preventing those that already exist). I'm not sure this particular feature is where we should draw the line, though. > What that seems to indicate, to me at least, is that it'd be awful > nice to have a way to resync the data which doesn't necessairly > involve transferring all of it over again. > > Of course, it'd be nice if we could track those dependencies too, > but that's yet another thing. Yep, that seems like a good idea in general. Both here and for functional indexes (although I suppose sure is a technical reason why it wasn't implemented right away for them). > > In short, I'm not sure that I agree with the idea that we shouldn't > allow this and instead I'd rather we realize it and put the logical > replication into some kind of an error state that requires a resync. > That would still mean a need to resync the data to recover, so I'm not sure it's really an improvement. And I suppose it'd require tracking the dependencies, because how else would you mark the subscription as requiring a resync? At which point we could decline the DROP without a CASCADE, just like we do elsewhere, no? regards -- Tomas Vondra http://www.2ndQuadrant.com PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services