TABLE ADD KEY — Add primary key for use by Slony-I for a table with no suitable key
TABLE ADD KEY (options);
In the Slony-I replication system,
every replicated table is required to have at least one
UNIQUE
constraint whose columns are
declared NOT NULL.
Any primary key
satisfies this requirement.
As a last resort, this command can be used to add such an attribute to a table that does not have a primary key. Since this modification can have unwanted side effects, it is strongly recommended that users add a unique and not null attribute by other means.
NODE ID = ival
Node ID of the set origin where the table will be added as a set member. (See SET ADD TABLE.)
FULLY QUALIFIED NAME = 'string'
The full name of the table consisting of the schema
and table name as the SQL expression quote_ident(nspname)
|| '.' || quote_ident(relname)
would return it.
There is a limitation at present; you can create a
PostgreSQL table with no columns, as with create table
real_short ();
. Slony-I will refuse to handle such a
table. This isn't presently regarded as a serious limitation, as
we can't see there being terribly much interest in replicating
tables that contain no application data.
TABLE ADD KEY
should
not be used if you can possibly avoid it. It is
emphatically not a Best Practice.
The absence of a proper primary key should be a big red flag that the database schema is broken. The right way to repair this is to introduce a proper primary key, not to have Slony-I “fake” one up.
It is not supported in log shipping, and we do not intend to add support.
This uses schemadoctableaddkey( text ).
On the origin node, this will take out an exclusive lock on the table being modified for as long as it takes to:
Alter the table, adding the column;
Alter each row in the table, attaching the sequence value;
Adding the new unique index to the table.
On subscriber nodes, these alterations take place on the table when it is empty, and do not add any particular additional burden to subscription time where the table will be locked on the subscriber node.
If the table is large and frequently updated, by your applications, this will impose a not-insignificant application outage for the duration of the time it takes to modify the table on the origin node. That is why it is recommended that this command should not be used if you can possibly avoid it.