This page provides steps to replicate data between Google Cloud AlloyDB
and AlloyDB Omni using the pglogical
extension.
For an overview of pglogical
in AlloyDB Omni, its benefits, and limitations, see About the pglogical extension.
Key components of pglogical
Key components of the pglogical
extension are as follows:
- Node: reference given for the database within a PostgreSQL cluster.
The
pglogical
extension is installed into, and works against any number of databases within the cluster, and each acts as a distinct pglogical node. Each node can be either a provider also known as replication source or subscriber also known as replication target, or both concurrently. Only one node is allowed per database. - Replication set: defined in the provider database as a logical grouping of
tables and sequences to be migrated, and the SQL statements such as
INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, TRUNCATE
that need to replicated. You can assign tables to more than one replication set. By default, three pre-configured replication sets such asdefault
,default_insert_only
, andddl_sql
are provided, and you can add any number of additional replication sets to meet your needs. - Subscription: provides details of the changes that are replicated from provider
databases and changes that are replicated from provider databases, in the subscriber
database. The subscription specifies the provider database through a
connection string, and optionally, which replication sets from that provider
should be copied. Additional, you can also specify whether to use
apply delay
when you create the subscription.
In this deployment, the Google Cloud AlloyDB service is the provider and the on-premises AlloyDB Omni is the subscriber. Note that the opposite configuration is also possible.
Supported authentication methods
You must consider networking and security between the replication
nodes before implementing the pglogical
extension on AlloyDB Omni.
The two main authentication methods
used with the pglogical
extension are password and trust authentication
methods.
The recommended authentication method is trust authentication because in
the password authentication method, passwords are stored in plain text format
in database tables owned by pglogical
. These passwords are visible in plain
text to anyone with database permissions to query these tables, in non-binary backups,
and in the PostgreSQL log files.
If you are using the trust authentication method, you must make specific entries
in the host-based authentication file, pg_hba.conf
for maximum security. You can
restrict the access by specifying the target databases, permitting only the replication
option or specific databases, the replication user, and only from the subscriber's
specific IP address.
Before you begin
You can install pglogical
as an extension within a given database.
Before implementing the pglogical
extension on AlloyDB Omni, ensure
that you meet the following system requirements:
- A Google Cloud AlloyDB cluster, and read/write access to the primary instance as a Cloud AlloyDB Admin. For instructions on how to provision a Google Cloud AlloyDB cluster, see Create and connect to a database.
- An AlloyDB Omni server, installed and configured. For instructions on how to install AlloyDB Omni, see Install AlloyDB Omni.
- The IP addresses for both the Google Cloud AlloyDB's primary instance and the AlloyDB Omni host server.
- An established and secured network between the Google Cloud AlloyDB and the AlloyDB Omni host server. TCP connectivity on the standard PostgreSQL port of 5432 is required.
Adjust parameters on the Google Cloud AlloyDB provider
The pglogical
extension requires a minimal set of parameter adjustments on the
Google Cloud AlloyDB provider cluster. You must set the
wal_level
parameter to logical
, and append pglogical
to the shared_preload_libraries
parameter in the postgresql.conf
file.
cp postgresql.conf postgresql.bak
sed -r -i "s|(\#)?wal_level\s*=.*|wal_level=logical|" postgresql.conf
sed -r -i "s|(\#)?(shared_preload_libraries\s*=\s*)'(.*)'.*$|\2'\3,pglogical'|" postgresql.conf
sed -r -i "s|',|'|" postgresql.conf
In the Google Cloud AlloyDB service, you can adjust parameters by setting the appropriate cluster flags.
You must adjust parameters for the following Google Cloud AlloyDB flags:
alloydb.enable_pglogical = on
alloydb.logical_decoding = on
For information about how to set database flags in Google Cloud AlloyDB, see Configure an instance's database flags.
For the other required provider-node database parameters, you must set the Google Cloud AlloyDB default values as follows:
max_worker_processes
: one per provider database and at least one per subscriber node. At least 10 is the standard for this parameter.max_replication_slots
: one per node on provider nodes.max_wal_senders
: one per node on provider nodes.track_commit_timestamp
: set toon
if the last or first update wins conflict resolution is required.listen_addresses
: must include the AlloyDB Omni IP address or mention through a covering CIDR block.
You can check these parameters using any query tool, such as psql
.
Adjust parameters on the AlloyDB Omni subscriber cluster
The pglogical
extension requires a minimal set of parameter adjustments on the
AlloyDB Omni subscriber too. You must append pglogical
to the shared_preload_libraries
parameter in the DATA_DIR/postgresql.conf
file. If any database within the cluster acts as a provider database, then make
the parameter changes required for provider databases.
Replace DATA_DIR with the file system path to your data directory—for example, /home/$USER/alloydb-data
.
Adjust the parameters:
sudo sed -r -i "s|(shared_preload_libraries\s*=\s*)'(.*)'.*$|\1'\2,pglogical'|" DATA_DIR/postgresql.conf
Verify that the parameter is set properly:
grep -iE 'shared_preload_libraries' DATA_DIR/postgresql.conf
Restart AlloyDB Omni for the parameter change to take effect:
Docker
docker container restart CONTAINER_NAME
Replace
CONTAINER_NAME
with the name that you assigned to the AlloyDB Omni container when you installed it.Podman
podman container restart CONTAINER_NAME
Replace
CONTAINER_NAME
with the name that you assigned to the AlloyDB Omni container when you installed it.Set the AlloyDB Omni default values for other provider database parameters:
max_worker_processes
: One per provider database and one per subscriber node.track_commit_timestamp
: Set toon
if the last or first update wins conflict resolution is required.
Confirm all parameter values are set correctly:
Docker
docker exec CONTAINER_NAME psql -h localhost -U postgres -c " SELECT name, setting FROM pg_catalog.pg_settings WHERE name IN ('listen_addresses', 'wal_level', 'shared_preload_libraries', 'max_worker_processes', 'max_replication_slots', 'max_wal_senders', 'track_commit_timestamp') ORDER BY name;"
Podman
podman exec CONTAINER_NAME psql -h localhost -U postgres -c " SELECT name, setting FROM pg_catalog.pg_settings WHERE name IN ('listen_addresses', 'wal_level', 'shared_preload_libraries', 'max_worker_processes', 'max_replication_slots', 'max_wal_senders', 'track_commit_timestamp') ORDER BY name;"
Host-based authentication adjustments to the AlloyDB Omni subscriber cluster
The pglogical
makes local TCP connections to the AlloyDB Omni subscriber
database. Therefore, you must add the subscriber's host server's IP address to
the AlloyDB Omni DATA_DIR/pg_hba.conf
file.
Add a trust authentication entry for the local server, specific to a new
pglogical_replication
user, to theDATA_DIR/pg_hba.conf
file:echo -e "# pglogical entries: host all pglogical_replication samehost trust " | column -t | sudo tee -a DATA_DIR/pg_hba.conf
Verify that the entry is correct:
tail -2 DATA_DIR/pg_hba.conf
Restart AlloyDB Omni for the authentication change to take effect:
Docker
docker container restart CONTAINER_NAME
Podman
podman container restart CONTAINER_NAME
Create a pglogical
user in provider and subscriber clusters
You must create a new user in both the provider and subscriber cluster.
pglogical
requires the user to have both the superuser
and replication
permissions.
In the Google Cloud AlloyDB provider cluster, create the user and grant the
alloydbsuperuser
role:CREATE USER pglogical_replication LOGIN PASSWORD 'secret'; ALTER USER pglogical_replication WITH replication; GRANT alloydbsuperuser TO pglogical_replication;
In the AlloyDB Omni subscriber cluster, create the user and grant the
replication
andsuperuser
attributes:CREATE USER pglogical_replication LOGIN PASSWORD 'secret'; ALTER USER pglogical_replication WITH replication; ALTER USER pglogical_replication WITH superuser;
Add pglogical
and nodes to the Google Cloud AlloyDB provider database
Grant required privileges.
You must install the
pglogical
extension in each database and grant theusage
permission to the pglogical database user. In Google Cloud AlloyDB, you must grant privileges on thepglogical
schema.For example, if your database is
my_test_db
, run the following command against the Google Cloud AlloyDB provider database:\c my_test_db; CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS pglogical; GRANT usage ON SCHEMA pglogical TO pglogical_replication; -- For Google Cloud AlloyDB we also need to manually grant privileges: GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON ALL tables IN SCHEMA pglogical TO pglogical_replication;
Create a
pglogical
node for the provider databases. Thenode_name
is arbitrary and thedsn
string must be a valid TCP connection back to the same database. For Google Cloud AlloyDB, the host part of thedsn
is the IP address provided for the primary instance.For Google Cloud AlloyDB, trust authentication is not permitted, and the password argument must be included in the
dsn
. parameter.For example, for the
my_test_db
database, run the following command:SELECT pglogical.create_node(node_name := 'provider', dsn := 'host=SERVER_IP_ADDRESS port=5432 dbname=my_test_db user=pglogical_replication password=secret');
Create a table and add it to the default replication set
Create a table and add it to the default replication set on the Google Cloud AlloyDB provider database.
Create a test table called
test_table_1
in the provider database:CREATE TABLE test_table_1 (col1 INT PRIMARY KEY); INSERT INTO test_table_1 VALUES (1),(2),(3);
Grant
SELECT
on the individual tables or run theGRANT SELECT ON ALL TABLES
command. Any tables that are to be part of a replication set must have query permission granted to the replication user,pglogical_replication
.GRANT SELECT ON ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA public TO pglogical_replication;
Manually add the test table to the default replication set. You can either create custom pglogical replication sets, or you can use the default replication sets. Several default replication sets such as
default
,default_insert_only
, andddl_sql
were created when you created the extension. You can add tables and sequences to the replication sets individually, or all at once for a specified schema.-- Add the specified table to the default replication set: SELECT pglogical.replication_set_add_table(set_name := 'default', relation := 'test_table_1', synchronize_data := TRUE); -- Check which tables have been added to all replication sets: SELECT * FROM pglogical.replication_set_table;
(Optional) Add all tables in a specified schema, such as
public
:-- Add all "public" schema tables to the default replication set: SELECT pglogical.replication_set_add_all_tables('default', ARRAY['public']); -- Check which tables have been added to all replication sets: SELECT * FROM pglogical.replication_set_table; -- Add all "public" schema sequences to the default replication: SELECT pglogical.replication_set_add_all_sequences('default', ARRAY['public']); -- Check which sequences have been added to all replication sets: SELECT * FROM pglogical.replication_set_seq;
Remove the table from the
default
replication set. If there are any tables in the schema that do not have a primary key, then you can either set it up for INSERT only replication or set the columns that uniquely identify the row by using theREPLICA IDENTITY
feature used with theALTER TABLE
command. If you have added those tables to thedefault
replication set automatically using thereplication_set_add_all_tables
function, then you must manually remove them from that replication set and add them to thedefault_insert_only
set.-- Remove the table from the **default** replication set: SELECT pglogical.replication_set_remove_table(set_name := 'default', relation := 'test_table_2');
-- Manually add to the **default_insert_only** replication set: SELECT pglogical.replication_set_add_table(set_name := 'default_insert_only', relation := 'test_table_2');
Optionally, if you want to add the newly created tables to the replication set automatically, add the
pglogical_assign_repset
trigger as suggested in thepglogical
source.
Copy the database to the AlloyDB Omni subscriber cluster
Create a schema-only backup of the source database using the
pg_dump
utility.Run the
pg_dump
command from your AlloyDB Omni subscriber server using the IP address of the Google Cloud AlloyDB primary instance.pg_dump -h SERVER_IP_ADDRESS -U postgres --create --schema-only my_test_db > my_test_db.schema-only.sql
Import the backup into the subscriber database on the subscriber AlloyDB Omni server:
Docker
docker exec -i CONTAINER_NAME psql -h localhost -U postgres < my_test_db.schema-only.sql
Podman
podman exec -i CONTAINER_NAME psql -h localhost -U postgres < my_test_db.schema-only.sql
Ignore errors such as alloydbsuperuser not existing
. This role is specific to
Google Cloud AlloyDB.
This creates the database and the schema, without any of the row data. Row
data is replicated by the pglogical
extension. Manually copy or recreate any
other users or roles that are required.
Create a node and subscription on the AlloyDB Omni subscriber database
Create a node on the AlloyDB Omni subscriber database:
Docker
docker exec CONTAINER_NAME psql -h localhost -U postgres -d my_test_db -c " SELECT pglogical.create_node(node_name := 'subscriber', dsn := 'host=localhost port=5432 dbname=my_test_db user=pglogical_replication');"
Podman
podman exec CONTAINER_NAME psql -h localhost -U postgres -d my_test_db -c " SELECT pglogical.create_node(node_name := 'subscriber', dsn := 'host=localhost port=5432 dbname=my_test_db user=pglogical_replication');"
Create a subscription in the subscriber database, pointing back to the Google Cloud AlloyDB provider database's primary instance.
Docker
docker exec CONTAINER_NAME psql -h localhost -U postgres -d my_test_db -c " SELECT pglogical.create_subscription(subscription_name := 'test_sub_1', provider_dsn := 'host=SERVER_IP_ADDRESS port=5432 dbname=my_test_db user=pglogical_replication password=secret');"
Podman
podman exec CONTAINER_NAME psql -h localhost -U postgres -d my_test_db -c " SELECT pglogical.create_subscription(subscription_name := 'test_sub_1', provider_dsn := 'host=SERVER_IP_ADDRESS port=5432 dbname=my_test_db user=pglogical_replication password=secret');"
Based on your table size and data to be replicated, the replication time might vary from seconds to minutes, after which the initial data should have replicated from the provider to the subscriber:
Docker
docker exec CONTAINER_NAME psql -h localhost -U postgres -d my_test_db -c " SELECT * FROM test_table_1 ORDER BY 1;"
Podman
podman exec CONTAINER_NAME psql -h localhost -U postgres -d my_test_db -c " SELECT * FROM test_table_1 ORDER BY 1;"
Additional rows that are added to the provider database are also replicated within seconds.
Additional pglogical
deployment considerations
The pglogical
extension has many advanced features that are not covered in this document.
Many of these features are applicable to your implementation. You can consider the
following advanced features:
- Conflict resolution
- Multimaster and bi-directional replication
- Inclusion of sequences
- Switchover and failover procedures
What's next
- Replicate data between AlloyDB Omni and other databases
- Switchover and failover with
pglogical
replication