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PostgreSQL Replication, Second Edition

You're reading from  PostgreSQL Replication, Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783550609
Pages 322 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages

Table of Contents (22) Chapters

PostgreSQL Replication Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Understanding the Concepts of Replication 2. Understanding the PostgreSQL Transaction Log 3. Understanding Point-in-time Recovery 4. Setting Up Asynchronous Replication 5. Setting Up Synchronous Replication 6. Monitoring Your Setup 7. Understanding Linux High Availability 8. Working with PgBouncer 9. Working with pgpool 10. Configuring Slony 11. Using SkyTools 12. Working with Postgres-XC 13. Scaling with PL/Proxy 14. Scaling with BDR 15. Working with Walbouncer Index

Understanding sets


So far, the entire cluster has been used. Everybody was able to replicate data to everybody else. In many cases, this is not what is desired. BDR provides quite some flexibility in this area.

Unidirectional replication

BDR can perform not only bidirectional replication but also unidirectional replication. In some cases, this can be very handy. Consider a system that is just there to serve some reads. A simple unidirectional slave might be what you need.

BDR provides a simple function to register a node as a unidirectional slave:

bdr.bdr_subscribe(local_node_name,
  subscribe_to_dsn,
  node_local_dsn,
  apply_delay integer DEFAULT NULL,
  replication_sets text[] DEFAULT ARRAY['default'],
  synchronize bdr_sync_type DEFAULT 'full')

Of course, it is also possible to remove a node from unidirectional replication again:

bdr.bdr_unsubscribe(local_node_name)

The setup process is fairly simple and fits nicely into BDR's fundamental design principles.

Handling data tables

The beauty of...

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