table of contents
CREATE SUBSCRIPTION(7) | PostgreSQL 16.6 Documentation | CREATE SUBSCRIPTION(7) |
NAME¶
CREATE_SUBSCRIPTION - define a new subscription
SYNOPSIS¶
CREATE SUBSCRIPTION subscription_name
CONNECTION 'conninfo'
PUBLICATION publication_name [, ...]
[ WITH ( subscription_parameter [= value] [, ... ] ) ]
DESCRIPTION¶
CREATE SUBSCRIPTION adds a new logical-replication subscription. The user that creates a subscription becomes the owner of the subscription. The subscription name must be distinct from the name of any existing subscription in the current database.
A subscription represents a replication connection to the publisher. Hence, in addition to adding definitions in the local catalogs, this command normally creates a replication slot on the publisher.
A logical replication worker will be started to replicate data for the new subscription at the commit of the transaction where this command is run, unless the subscription is initially disabled.
To be able to create a subscription, you must have the privileges of the the pg_create_subscription role, as well as CREATE privileges on the current database.
Additional information about subscriptions and logical replication as a whole is available at Section 31.2 and Chapter 31.
PARAMETERS¶
subscription_name
CONNECTION 'conninfo'
PUBLICATION publication_name [, ...]
WITH ( subscription_parameter [= value] [, ... ] )
The following parameters control what happens during subscription creation:
connect (boolean)
Since no connection is made when this option is false, no tables are subscribed. To initiate replication, you must manually create the replication slot, enable the subscription, and refresh the subscription. See Section 31.2.3 for examples.
create_slot (boolean)
If set to false, you are responsible for creating the publisher's slot in some other way. See Section 31.2.3 for examples.
enabled (boolean)
slot_name (string)
Setting slot_name to NONE means there will be no replication slot associated with the subscription. Such subscriptions must also have both enabled and create_slot set to false. Use this when you will be creating the replication slot later manually. See Section 31.2.3 for examples.
The following parameters control the subscription's replication behavior after it has been created:
binary (boolean)
When doing cross-version replication, it could be that the publisher has a binary send function for some data type, but the subscriber lacks a binary receive function for that type. In such a case, data transfer will fail, and the binary option cannot be used.
If the publisher is a PostgreSQL version before 16, then any initial table synchronization will use text format even if binary = true.
copy_data (boolean)
If the publications contain WHERE clauses, it will affect what data is copied. Refer to the Notes for details.
See Notes for details of how copy_data = true can interact with the origin parameter.
streaming (enum)
If set to on, the incoming changes are written to temporary files and then applied only after the transaction is committed on the publisher and received by the subscriber.
If set to parallel, incoming changes are directly applied via one of the parallel apply workers, if available. If no parallel apply worker is free to handle streaming transactions then the changes are written to temporary files and applied after the transaction is committed. Note that if an error happens in a parallel apply worker, the finish LSN of the remote transaction might not be reported in the server log.
synchronous_commit (enum)
It is safe to use off for logical replication: If the subscriber loses transactions because of missing synchronization, the data will be sent again from the publisher.
A different setting might be appropriate when doing synchronous logical replication. The logical replication workers report the positions of writes and flushes to the publisher, and when using synchronous replication, the publisher will wait for the actual flush. This means that setting synchronous_commit for the subscriber to off when the subscription is used for synchronous replication might increase the latency for COMMIT on the publisher. In this scenario, it can be advantageous to set synchronous_commit to local or higher.
two_phase (boolean)
When two-phase commit is enabled, prepared transactions are sent to the subscriber at the time of PREPARE TRANSACTION, and are processed as two-phase transactions on the subscriber too. Otherwise, prepared transactions are sent to the subscriber only when committed, and are then processed immediately by the subscriber.
The implementation of two-phase commit requires that replication has successfully finished the initial table synchronization phase. So even when two_phase is enabled for a subscription, the internal two-phase state remains temporarily “pending” until the initialization phase completes. See column subtwophasestate of pg_subscription to know the actual two-phase state.
disable_on_error (boolean)
password_required (boolean)
run_as_owner (boolean)
origin (string)
See Notes for details of how copy_data = true can interact with the origin parameter.
When specifying a parameter of type boolean, the = value part can be omitted, which is equivalent to specifying TRUE.
NOTES¶
See Section 31.9 for details on how to configure access control between the subscription and the publication instance.
When creating a replication slot (the default behavior), CREATE SUBSCRIPTION cannot be executed inside a transaction block.
Creating a subscription that connects to the same database cluster (for example, to replicate between databases in the same cluster or to replicate within the same database) will only succeed if the replication slot is not created as part of the same command. Otherwise, the CREATE SUBSCRIPTION call will hang. To make this work, create the replication slot separately (using the function pg_create_logical_replication_slot with the plugin name pgoutput) and create the subscription using the parameter create_slot = false. See Section 31.2.3 for examples. This is an implementation restriction that might be lifted in a future release.
If any table in the publication has a WHERE clause, rows for which the expression evaluates to false or null will not be published. If the subscription has several publications in which the same table has been published with different WHERE clauses, a row will be published if any of the expressions (referring to that publish operation) are satisfied. In the case of different WHERE clauses, if one of the publications has no WHERE clause (referring to that publish operation) or the publication is declared as FOR ALL TABLES or FOR TABLES IN SCHEMA, rows are always published regardless of the definition of the other expressions. If the subscriber is a PostgreSQL version before 15, then any row filtering is ignored during the initial data synchronization phase. For this case, the user might want to consider deleting any initially copied data that would be incompatible with subsequent filtering. Because initial data synchronization does not take into account the publication publish parameter when copying existing table data, some rows may be copied that would not be replicated using DML. See Section 31.2.2 for examples.
Subscriptions having several publications in which the same table has been published with different column lists are not supported.
We allow non-existent publications to be specified so that users can add those later. This means pg_subscription can have non-existent publications.
When using a subscription parameter combination of copy_data = true and origin = NONE, the initial sync table data is copied directly from the publisher, meaning that knowledge of the true origin of that data is not possible. If the publisher also has subscriptions then the copied table data might have originated from further upstream. This scenario is detected and a WARNING is logged to the user, but the warning is only an indication of a potential problem; it is the user's responsibility to make the necessary checks to ensure the copied data origins are really as wanted or not.
To find which tables might potentially include non-local origins (due to other subscriptions created on the publisher) try this SQL query:
# substitute <pub-names> below with your publication name(s) to be queried SELECT DISTINCT PT.schemaname, PT.tablename FROM pg_publication_tables PT,
pg_subscription_rel PS
JOIN pg_class C ON (C.oid = PS.srrelid)
JOIN pg_namespace N ON (N.oid = C.relnamespace) WHERE N.nspname = PT.schemaname AND
C.relname = PT.tablename AND
PT.pubname IN (<pub-names>);
EXAMPLES¶
Create a subscription to a remote server that replicates tables in the publications mypublication and insert_only and starts replicating immediately on commit:
CREATE SUBSCRIPTION mysub
CONNECTION 'host=192.168.1.50 port=5432 user=foo dbname=foodb'
PUBLICATION mypublication, insert_only;
Create a subscription to a remote server that replicates tables in the insert_only publication and does not start replicating until enabled at a later time.
CREATE SUBSCRIPTION mysub
CONNECTION 'host=192.168.1.50 port=5432 user=foo dbname=foodb'
PUBLICATION insert_only
WITH (enabled = false);
COMPATIBILITY¶
CREATE SUBSCRIPTION is a PostgreSQL extension.
SEE ALSO¶
ALTER SUBSCRIPTION (ALTER_SUBSCRIPTION(7)), DROP SUBSCRIPTION (DROP_SUBSCRIPTION(7)), CREATE PUBLICATION (CREATE_PUBLICATION(7)), ALTER PUBLICATION (ALTER_PUBLICATION(7))
2024 | PostgreSQL 16.6 |