Re: Logical replication is missing block of rows when sending initial sync? - Mailing list pgsql-bugs
From | Tomas Vondra |
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Subject | Re: Logical replication is missing block of rows when sending initial sync? |
Date | |
Msg-id | 2a638962-7a62-abd6-d9a4-3c322ec2a06d@enterprisedb.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: Logical replication is missing block of rows when sending initial sync? (hubert depesz lubaczewski <depesz@depesz.com>) |
Responses |
Re: Logical replication is missing block of rows when sending initial sync?
|
List | pgsql-bugs |
On 11/8/23 15:02, hubert depesz lubaczewski wrote: >> OK. found another case (maybe two). > > OK, the other case is real. Different database. Same scenario. > > Errors (3 because we have 3 missing fkeys): > > #v+ > ALTER TABLE ONLY c44s16539.assignment_overrides ADD CONSTRAINT fk_rails_58f8ee369b FOREIGN KEY (assignment_id) REFERENCESc44s16539.assignments(id); > ERROR: insert or update on table "assignment_overrides" violates foreign key constraint "fk_rails_58f8ee369b" > DETAIL: Key (assignment_id)=(248083) is not present in table "assignments". > > ALTER TABLE ONLY c44s16539.post_policies ADD CONSTRAINT fk_rails_cf2d119863 FOREIGN KEY (assignment_id) REFERENCES c44s16539.assignments(id); > ERROR: insert or update on table "post_policies" violates foreign key constraint "fk_rails_cf2d119863" > DETAIL: Key (assignment_id)=(248083) is not present in table "assignments". > > ALTER TABLE ONLY c44s16539.submissions ADD CONSTRAINT fk_rails_61cac0823d FOREIGN KEY (assignment_id) REFERENCES c44s16539.assignments(id); > ERROR: insert or update on table "submissions" violates foreign key constraint "fk_rails_61cac0823d" > DETAIL: Key (assignment_id)=(248083) is not present in table "assignments". > #v- > > In all cases the problem is missing c44s16539.assignments with is = 248083. > > This time it looks that only one row is missing: > > #v+ > Pg14# select max(id) from c44s16539.assignments where id < 248083; > max > ──────── > 248082 > (1 row) > > Pg14# select min(id) from c44s16539.assignments where id > 248083; > min > ──────── > 248084 > (1 row) > #v- > > Schema is complicated. 76 columns. On pg12 side one column is dropped. > 22 indexes, 9 fkeys from this table (assignments) to others, ~ 35 fkeys > pointing to this table (but only 3 have rows that reference the > missing record. > > Some informationa bout the record: > > #v+ > Pg12# select ctid, xmin, cmin, xmax, cmax, id, created_at, updated_at from c44s16539.assignments where id = 248083 \gx > ─[ RECORD 1 ]────────────────────────── > ctid │ (24192,1) > xmin │ 472291499 > cmin │ 12 > xmax │ 472291499 > cmax │ 12 > id │ 248083 > created_at │ 2023-11-07 15:50:05.506077 > updated_at │ 2023-11-07 15:51:28.738893 > #v- > > logs for when it was added to replication: > > #v+ > 2023-11-07 15:47:27.898 UTC,"postgres","dbname",2333,"[local]",654a5c0f.91d,39,"ALTER PUBLICATION",2023-11-07 15:47:27UTC,6/0,0,LOG,00000,"duration: 1.476 ms",,,,,,,,,"psql" > 2023-11-07 15:47:27.899 UTC,"postgres","dbname",2333,"[local]",654a5c0f.91d,40,"idle",2023-11-07 15:47:27 UTC,6/1209097693,0,LOG,00000,"statement:ALTER PUBLICATION focal14 ADD TABLE ONLY c247s1094.messages_2022_50;",,,,,,,,,"psql" > 2023-11-07 15:47:27.900 UTC,"postgres","dbname",2333,"[local]",654a5c0f.91d,41,"ALTER PUBLICATION",2023-11-07 15:47:27UTC,6/0,0,LOG,00000,"duration: 1.493 ms",,,,,,,,,"psql" > 2023-11-07 15:47:27.900 UTC,"postgres","dbname",2333,"[local]",654a5c0f.91d,42,"idle",2023-11-07 15:47:27 UTC,6/1209097694,0,LOG,00000,"statement:ALTER PUBLICATION focal14 ADD TABLE ONLY c44s16539.assignments;",,,,,,,,,"psql" > 2023-11-07 15:47:27.902 UTC,"postgres","dbname",2333,"[local]",654a5c0f.91d,43,"ALTER PUBLICATION",2023-11-07 15:47:27UTC,6/0,0,LOG,00000,"duration: 1.936 ms",,,,,,,,,"psql" > 2023-11-07 15:47:27.902 UTC,"postgres","dbname",2333,"[local]",654a5c0f.91d,44,"idle",2023-11-07 15:47:27 UTC,6/1209097695,0,LOG,00000,"statement:ALTER PUBLICATION focal14 ADD TABLE ONLY c39s5131.messages_2023_20;",,,,,,,,,"psql" > 2023-11-07 15:47:27.903 UTC,"postgres","dbname",2333,"[local]",654a5c0f.91d,45,"ALTER PUBLICATION",2023-11-07 15:47:27UTC,6/0,0,LOG,00000,"duration: 1.292 ms",,,,,,,,,"psql" > #v- > > It is interesting that the time when the row was inserted (created_at) is > always "around" the time that the table was added to publication... > > Just like with the other case, I can leave it in current state for > a day, so if you'd need more information from it, let me know. > I think it'd be interesting to look at the WAL using pg_waldump, and see how it relates to the LSN used for the tablesync slot. I'll try reproducing this locally over the weekend. Should I use the test_1030.sh script that you shared a week ago, or do I need to do something more? One thing that puzzles me is that IIUC the script doesn't generate any changes while adding the tables to the subscription? I probably should have paid more attention to the details, instead of assuming there are concurrent changes - which seemed like there might be some race, or something. But this seems like there are no changes and the tablesync just fails to copy some subset of it. That's *really* strange. regards -- Tomas Vondra EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
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