Thomas Kellerer schrieb am 25.08.2020 um 07:32:
> we have a a logical replication from Postgres 11 to Postgres 12.
>
> We did some structural changes to the published tables. The changes
> to the subscriber where applied about 60 minutes later then those on
> the publisher. Obviously before the subscriber's tables where synced
> the replication failed.
> But even though the tables are now completely identical, the subscriber still claims:
> logical replication target relation "public.employee" is missing some replicated columns
So - as explained by Samed - the problem boils down to a setup like this:
The initial table looked like this (on both sides)
create table test_table (id integer primary key, valid_from date, valid_to date);
Replication is running fine, then we run the following on the publisher
begin transaction;
ALTER TABLE test_table ADD COLUMN start_end_date daterange;
UPDATE test_table SET start_end_date = daterange(valid_from, valid_to, '[]');
ALTER TABLE test_table ALTER COLUMN start_end_date SET NOT NULL;
ALTER TABLE test_table
DROP COLUMN valid_from,
DROP COLUMN valid_to;
commit;
If the UPDATE part is removed from the change, everything works smoothly.
So, the UPDATE sends the complete modified row including the to be dropped columns to the subscriber.
As I ran the same steps on the subscriber, the columns were dropped on the subscriber before the UPDATE could be
replayedand thus it kept failing.
I do understand now why this happens, and that it is a limitation of the current implementation.
However, what I don't understand is, why removing the table from the replication doesn't fix this.
It seems, that if the table is re-added later, the old WAL segments are still considered valid and Postgres tries to
replaythem.
Which seems a rather strange thing to do to me.
Could anyone enlighten me on that?
Is there a way to mark the no longer needed WAL segments as obsolete?
Regards
Thomas