Hi I double checked and there is data going over, thought I would correct that.
But it seems to be very slow. Having said that how do I / what tools do I use to check through put A On 1 August 2017 at 08:56, Alex Samad <a...@samad.com.au> wrote: > Hi > > I'm using pg_dump 9.6 to do the dumps. > > I'm also pretty sure no data is being replicated until the end of the copy > stdin as I was watching tcpdump output and I can see data from the orig > master to the new master and no traffic between new master and the standby, > pretty sure my replication is working as my other tables have replicated > over. > > > as for allow pg_dump to create copy stdin with specific number of rows - > not sure what that is so hard / bad, if it was a option for somebody to > use. For my situation its sounds like a really good idea. > > I'm dumping a single table into a new single table so constraint shouldn't > be a problem. > > > Guess I have to just let it rung to completion > > Thanks > > > > On 1 August 2017 at 06:59, Scott Marlowe <scott.marl...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> On Mon, Jul 31, 2017 at 2:31 AM, vinny <vi...@xs4all.nl> wrote: >> > On 2017-07-31 11:02, Alex Samad wrote: >> >> >> >> Hi >> >> >> >> I am using pg_dump | psql to transfer data from my old 9.2 psql into a >> >> 9.6 psql. >> >> Note that you should be doing pg_dump with 9.6's pg_dump, as it's >> possible for 9.2's pg_dump to not know about a 9.6 feature. >> >> >> The new DB server is setup as master replicating to a hot standby >> >> server. >> >> >> >> What I have noticed is that the rows don't get replicated over until >> >> the copy from stdin is finished... hard to test when you have M+ lines >> >> of rows. >> >> SNIP >> >> >> Is there a way to tell the master to replicate earlier >> > >> > I highly doubt it, because the master cannot know what to replicate >> until >> > your transaction is ended with a COMMIT. If you end with ROLLBACK, >> > or your last query is DELETE FROM (your_table>; >> > then there isn't even anything to replicate at all... >> >> This is actually a visibility issue. All the new changes are >> replicated to the slave, but just like on the master, other >> connections can't see the change because it's not visible. The slave, >> except for some small delay (seconds etc) is an exact replica of the >> master. So even a delete at the end gets replicated. You just don't >> see anything but possible table bloat to show for it. >> >> To prove this to oneself, start the copy, and get into another session >> to the master. You don't see any rows there either until the commit >> after the copy. >> > >