pg_createsubscriberpg_createsubscriber1Applicationpg_createsubscriberconvert a physical replica into a new logical replicapg_createsubscriberoptiondbnamedatadirconnstrDescriptionpg_createsubscriber creates a new logical
replica from a physical standby server. All tables in the specified
database are included in the logical
replication setup. A pair of
publication and subscription objects are created for each database. It
must be run at the target server.
After a successful run, the state of the target server is analogous to a
fresh logical replication setup. The main difference between the logical
replication setup and pg_createsubscriber is how
the data synchronization is done. pg_createsubscriber
does not copy the initial table data. It does only the synchronization phase,
which ensures each table is brought up to a synchronized state.
pg_createsubscriber targets large database
systems because in logical replication setup, most of the time is spent
doing the initial data copy. Furthermore, a side effect of this long time
spent synchronizing data is usually a large amount of changes to be applied
(that were produced during the initial data copy), which increases even
more the time when the logical replica will be available. For smaller
databases, it is recommended to set up logical replication with initial data
synchronization. For details, see the CREATE SUBSCRIPTIONcopy_data option.
Optionspg_createsubscriber accepts the following
command-line arguments:
Create one subscription per database on the target server. Exceptions
are template databases and databases that don't allow connections.
To discover the list of all databases, connect to the source server
using the database name specified in the
connection string, or if not specified, the postgres
database will be used, or if that does not exist, template1
will be used.
Automatically generated names for subscriptions, publications, and
replication slots are used when this option is specified.
This option cannot be used along with ,
, , or
.
The name of the database in which to create a subscription. Multiple
databases can be selected by writing multiple
switches. This option cannot be used together with .
If option is not provided, the database name will be
obtained from option. If the database name is not
specified in either the option, or the
option, and option is not
specified, an error will be reported.
The target directory that contains a cluster directory from a physical
replica.
Do everything except actually modifying the target directory.
The port number on which the target server is listening for
connections. Defaults to running the target server on port 50432 to
avoid unintended client connections.
The connection string to the publisher. For details see .
Remove all objects of the specified type from specified databases on the
target server.
publications:
The FOR ALL TABLES publications established for this
subscriber are always removed; specifying this object type causes all
other publications replicated from the source server to be dropped as
well.
The objects selected to be dropped are individually logged, including during
a . There is no opportunity to affect or stop the
dropping of the selected objects, so consider taking a backup of them
using pg_dump.
The directory to use for postmaster sockets on target server. The
default is current directory.
The maximum number of seconds to wait for recovery to end. Setting to
0 disables. The default is 0.
Enables two_phase
commit for the subscription. When multiple databases are specified, this
option applies uniformly to all subscriptions created on those databases.
The default is false.
The user name to connect as on target server. Defaults to the current
operating system user name.
Enables verbose mode. This will cause
pg_createsubscriber to output progress
messages and detailed information about each step to standard error.
Repeating the option causes additional debug-level messages to appear
on standard error.
Use the specified main server configuration file for the target data
directory. pg_createsubscriber internally uses
the pg_ctl command to start and
stop the target server. It allows you to specify the actual
postgresql.conf configuration file if it is stored
outside the data directory.
The publication name to set up the logical replication. Multiple
publications can be specified by writing multiple
switches. The number of publication
names must match the number of specified databases, otherwise an error
is reported. The order of the multiple publication name switches must
match the order of database switches. If this option is not specified,
a generated name is assigned to the publication name. This option cannot
be used together with .
The replication slot name to set up the logical replication. Multiple
replication slots can be specified by writing multiple
switches. The number of
replication slot names must match the number of specified databases,
otherwise an error is reported. The order of the multiple replication
slot name switches must match the order of database switches. If this
option is not specified, the subscription name is assigned to the
replication slot name. This option cannot be used together with
.
The subscription name to set up the logical replication. Multiple
subscriptions can be specified by writing multiple
switches. The number of subscription
names must match the number of specified databases, otherwise an error
is reported. The order of the multiple subscription name switches must
match the order of database switches. If this option is not specified,
a generated name is assigned to the subscription name. This option cannot
be used together with .
Print the pg_createsubscriber version and exit.
Show help about pg_createsubscriber command
line arguments, and exit.
NotesPrerequisites
There are some prerequisites for
pg_createsubscriber to convert the target server
into a logical replica. If these are not met, an error will be reported.
The source and target servers must have the same major version as the
pg_createsubscriber. The given target data
directory must have the same system identifier as the source data
directory. The given database user for the target data directory must have
privileges for creating subscriptions and using pg_replication_origin_advance().
The target server must be used as a physical standby. The target server
must have and configured to a value
greater than or equal to the number of specified databases. The target
server must have configured to a
value greater than the number of specified databases. The target server
must accept local connections. If you are planning to use the
switch then you will also need to set
the appropriately.
The source server must accept connections from the target server. The
source server must not be in recovery. The source server must have as logical. The source server
must have configured to a value
greater than or equal to the number of specified databases plus existing
replication slots. The source server must have configured to a value greater than or equal
to the number of specified databases and existing WAL sender processes.
Warnings
If pg_createsubscriber fails after the target
server was promoted, then the data directory is likely not in a state that
can be recovered. In such case, creating a new standby server is
recommended.
pg_createsubscriber usually starts the target
server with different connection settings during transformation. Hence,
connections to the target server should fail.
Since DDL commands are not replicated by logical replication, avoid
executing DDL commands that change the database schema while running
pg_createsubscriber. If the target server has
already been converted to logical replica, the DDL commands might not be
replicated, which might cause an error.
If pg_createsubscriber fails while processing,
objects (publications, replication slots) created on the source server are
removed. The removal might fail if the target server cannot connect to
the source server. In such a case, a warning message will inform the
objects left. If the target server is running, it will be stopped.
If the replication is using , it
will be removed from the source server after the logical replication
setup.
If the target server is a synchronous replica, transaction commits on the
primary might wait for replication while running
pg_createsubscriber.
Unless the switch is specified,
pg_createsubscriber sets up logical
replication with two-phase commit disabled. This means that any
prepared transactions will be replicated at the time
of COMMIT PREPARED, without advance preparation.
Once setup is complete, you can manually drop and re-create the
subscription(s) with
the two_phase
option enabled.
pg_createsubscriber changes the system
identifier using pg_resetwal. It would avoid
situations in which the target server might use WAL files from the source
server. If the target server has a standby, replication will break and a
fresh standby should be created.
Replication failures can occur if required WAL files are missing. To prevent
this, the source server must set
to -1 to
ensure that required WAL files are not prematurely removed.
How It Works
The basic idea is to have a replication start point from the source server
and set up a logical replication to start from this point:
Start the target server with the specified command-line options. If the
target server is already running,
pg_createsubscriber will terminate with an
error.
Check if the target server can be converted. There are also a few
checks on the source server. If any of the prerequisites are not met,
pg_createsubscriber will terminate with an
error.
Create a publication and replication slot for each specified database on
the source server. Each publication is created using FOR ALL
TABLES. If the option
is not specified, the publication has the following name pattern:
pg_createsubscriber_%u_%x (parameter:
database oid, random int).
If the option is not specified, the
replication slot has the following name pattern:
pg_createsubscriber_%u_%x (parameters:
database oid, random int).
These replication slots will be used by the subscriptions in a future
step. The last replication slot LSN is used as a stopping point in the
parameter and by the
subscriptions as a replication start point. It guarantees that no
transaction will be lost.
Write recovery parameters into the target data directory and restart the
target server. It specifies an LSN () of the write-ahead log location up
to which recovery will proceed. It also specifies
promote as the action that the server should take
once the recovery target is reached. Additional recovery parameters
are added to avoid unexpected behavior during the recovery process such
as end of the recovery as soon as a consistent state is reached (WAL
should be applied until the replication start location) and multiple
recovery targets that can cause a failure. This step finishes once the
server ends standby mode and is accepting read-write transactions. If
option is set,
pg_createsubscriber terminates if recovery
does not end until the given number of seconds.
Create a subscription for each specified database on the target server.
If the option is not specified, the
subscription has the following name pattern:
pg_createsubscriber_%u_%x (parameters:
database oid, random int).
It does not copy existing data from the source server. It does not
create a replication slot. Instead, it uses the replication slot that
was created in a previous step. The subscription is created but it is
not enabled yet. The reason is the replication progress must be set to
the replication start point before starting the replication.
Drop publications on the target server that were replicated because they
were created before the replication start location. It has no use on
the subscriber.
Set the replication progress to the replication start point for each
subscription. When the target server starts the recovery process, it
catches up to the replication start point. This is the exact LSN to be
used as a initial replication location for each subscription. The
replication origin name is obtained since the subscription was created.
The replication origin name and the replication start point are used in
pg_replication_origin_advance()
to set up the initial replication location.
Enable the subscription for each specified database on the target server.
The subscription starts applying transactions from the replication start
point.
If the standby server was using ,
it has no use from now on so drop it.
If the standby server contains failover
replication slots, they cannot be synchronized anymore, so drop
them.
Update the system identifier on the target server. The
is run to modify the system identifier.
The target server is stopped as a pg_resetwal requirement.
Examples
To create a logical replica for databases hr and
finance from a physical replica at
foo:
$pg_createsubscriber -D /usr/local/pgsql/data -P "host=foo" -d hr -d financeSee Also