EDB clone schema v14
EDB Clone Schema is an extension module for EDB Postgres Advanced Server that allows you to copy a schema and its database objects from a local or remote database (the source database) to a receiving database (the target database).
The source and target databases can be either:
- The same physical database
- Different databases in the same database cluster
- Separate databases running under different database clusters on separate database server hosts
Use the following functions with EDB Clone Schema:
localcopyschema
. This function copies a schema and its database objects from a source database into the same database (the target) but with a different schema name from the original. Use this function when the source schema and the copy will reside within the same database. See localcopyschema for more information.localcopyschema_nb
. This function performs the same purpose aslocalcopyschema
but as a background job, which frees up the terminal from which the function was initiated. This function is referred to as a non-blocking function. See localcopyschema_nb for more information.remotecopyschema
. This function copies a schema and its database objects from a source database to a different target database. Use this function when the source schema and the copy will reside in separate databases. The separate databases can reside in the same EDB Postgres Advanced Server database clusters or in different ones. See remotecopyschema for more information.remotecopyschema_nb
. This function performs the same purpose asremotecopyschema
but as a background job, which frees up the terminal from which the function was initiated. This function is a non-blocking function. See remotecopyschema_nb for more information.process_status_from_log
. This function displays the status of the cloning functions. The information is obtained from a log file you specify when invoking a cloning function. See process_status_from_log for more information.remove_log_file_and_job
. This function deletes the log file created by a cloning function. You can also use this function to delete a job created by the non-blocking form of the function. See remove_log_file_and_job for more information.
You can clone these database objects from one schema to another:
- Data types
- Tables including partitioned tables, excluding foreign tables
- Indexes
- Constraints
- Sequences
- View definitions
- Materialized views
- Private synonyms
- Table triggers, but excluding event triggers
- Rules
- Functions
- Procedures
- Packages
- Comments for all supported object types
- Access control lists (ACLs) for all supported object types
You can't clone the following database objects:
- Large objects (Postgres
LOBs
andBFILEs
) - Logical replication attributes for a table
- Database links
- Foreign data wrappers
- Foreign tables
- Event triggers
- Extensions
For cloning objects that rely on extensions, see the limitations that follow.
- Row-level security
- Policies
- Operator class
The following limitations apply:
- EDB Clone Schema is supported on EDB Postgres Advanced Server when you specify a dialect of Compatible with Oracle on the EDB Postgres Advanced Server Dialect dialog box during installation. It's also supported when you include the
--redwood-like
keywords during a text-mode installation or cluster initialization. - The source code in functions, procedures, triggers, packages, and so on, aren't modified after being copied to the target schema. If such programs contain coded references to objects with schema names, the programs might fail when invoked in the target schema if such schema names are no longer consistent in the target schema.
- Cross-schema object dependencies aren't resolved. If an object in the target schema depends on an object in another schema, this dependency isn't resolved by the cloning functions.
- For remote cloning, if an object in the source schema depends on an extension, then you must create this extension in the public schema of the remote database before invoking the remote cloning function.
- At most, 16 copy jobs can run in parallel to clone schemas. Each job can have at most 16 worker processes to copy table data in parallel.
- You can't cancel queries run by background workers.
Setup process
You must install several extensions along with the PL/Perl language on any database used as the source or target database by an EDB Clone Schema function.
In addition, it might help to modify some configuration parameters in the postgresql.conf
file of the database servers.
Installing extensions and PL/Perl
Perform this installation on any database to be used as the source or target database by an EDB Clone Schema function.
- Install the following extensions on the database:
postgres_fdw
dblink
adminpack
pgagent
Ensure that pgAgent is installed before creating the
pgagent
extension. On Linux, you can use theedb-asxx-pgagent
RPM package, wherexx
is the EDB Postgres Advanced Server version number to install pgAgent. On Windows, use StackBuilder Plus to download and install pgAgent.You can install the extensions using the following commands:
For more information about using the
CREATE EXTENSION
command, see the PostgreSQL core documentation.
Modify the
postgresql.conf
file by adding$libdir/parallel_clone
to theshared_preload_libraries
configuration parameter as shown in this example:Install the Perl procedural language (PL/Perl) on the database, and run the
CREATE TRUSTED LANGUAGE plperl
command. For Linux, install PL/Perl using theedb-asxx-server-plperl
RPM package, wherexx
is the EDB Postgres Advanced Server version number. For Windows, use the EDB Postgres Language Pack. For information on EDB Language Pack, see the EDB Postgres Language Pack.Connect to the database as a superuser and run the following command:
For more information about using the CREATE LANGUAGE
command, see the PostgreSQL core documentation.
Setting configuration parameters
You might need to modify configuration parameters in the postgresql.conf
file.
Performance configuration parameters
You might need to tune the system for copying a large schema as part of one transaction. Tuning of configuration parameters is for the source database server referenced in a cloning function.
You might need to tune the following configuration parameters in the postgresql.conf
file:
work_mem
. Specifies the amount of memory for internal sort operations and hash tables to use before writing to temporary disk files.maintenance_work_mem
. Specifies the maximum amount of memory for maintenance operations such asVACUUM
,CREATE INDEX
, andALTER TABLE ADD FOREIGN KEY
to use.max_worker_processes
. Sets the maximum number of background processes that the system can support.checkpoint_timeout
. Maximum time between automatic WAL checkpoints, in seconds.checkpoint_completion_target
. Specifies the target of checkpoint completion as a fraction of total time between checkpoints.checkpoint_flush_after
. Whenever more thancheckpoint_flush_after
bytes are written while performing a checkpoint, attempt to force the OS to issue these writes to the underlying storage.max_wal_size
. Maximum size to let the WAL grow to between automatic WAL checkpoints.max_locks_per_transaction
. Controls the average number of object locks allocated for each transaction. Individual transactions can lock more objects as long as the locks of all transactions fit in the lock table.
For information about the configuration parameters, see the PostgreSQL core documentation.
Status logging
Status logging by the cloning functions creates log files in the directory specified by the log_directory
parameter in the postgresql.conf
file for the database server to which you're connected when invoking the cloning function.
The default location is PGDATA/log
, as shown by the following:
This directory must exist before running a cloning function.
The name of the log file is determined by what you specify in the parameter list when invoking the cloning function.
To display the status from a log file, use the process_status_from_log
function.
To delete a log file, use the remove_log_file_and_job
function, or delete it manually from the log directory.
Installing EDB Clone Schema
Install the EDB Clone Schema on any database to be used as the source or target database by an EDB Clone Schema function.
If you previously installed an older version of the
edb_cloneschema
extension, run the following command:This command also drops the
edb_cloneschema
extension.Install the extensions. Make sure that you create the
parallel_clone
extension before creating theedb_cloneschema
extension.
Creating the foreign servers and user mappings
When using one of the local cloning functions localcopyschema
or localcopyschema_nb
, one of the required parameters includes a single, foreign server. This server is for identifying the database server and its database that's the source and receiver of the cloned schema.
When using one of the remote cloning functions remotecopyschema
or remotecopyschema_nb
, two of the required parameters include two foreign servers. The foreign server specified as the first parameter identifies the source database server and its database that's the provider of the cloned schema. The foreign server specified as the second parameter identifies the target database server and its database that's the receiver of the cloned schema.
For each foreign server, you must create a user mapping. When a selected database superuser invokes a cloning function, that superuser must be mapped to a database user name and password that has access to the foreign server that's specified as a parameter in the cloning function.
For general information about foreign data, foreign servers, and user mappings, see the PostgreSQL core documentation.
Foreign server and user mapping for local cloning functions
For the localcopyschema
and localcopyschema_nb
functions, the source and target schemas are both in the same database of the same database server. Thus, you must define and specify only one foreign server for these functions. This foreign server is also referred to as the local server because this server is the one to which you must be connected when invoking the localcopyschema
or localcopyschema_nb
function.
The user mapping defines the connection and authentication information for the foreign server. You must create this foreign server and user mapping in the database of the local server in which the cloning occurs.
The database user for whom the user mapping is defined must be a superuser and connected to the local server when invoking an EDB Clone Schema function.
This example creates the foreign server for the database containing the schema to clone and to receive the cloned schema:
For more information about using the CREATE SERVER
command, see the PostgreSQL core documentation.
The user mapping for this server is the following: