pgsync
Sync data from one Postgres database to another (like pg_dump/pg_restore). Designed for:
- speed - tables are transferred in parallel
- security - built-in methods to prevent sensitive data from ever leaving the server
- flexibility - gracefully handles schema differences, like missing columns and extra columns
- convenience - sync partial tables, groups of tables, and related records
🍊 Battle-tested at Instacart
Installation
pgsync is a command line tool. To install, run:
gem install pgsyncThis will give you the pgsync command. You can also install it with Homebrew. If installation fails, you may need to install dependencies.
Setup
In your project directory, run:
pgsync --initThis creates .pgsync.yml for you to customize. We recommend checking this into your version control (assuming it doesn’t contain sensitive information). pgsync commands can be run from this directory or any subdirectory.
How to Use
First, make sure your schema is set up in both databases. We recommend using a schema migration tool for this, but pgsync also provides a few convenience methods. Once that’s done, you’re ready to sync data.
Sync tables
pgsyncSync specific tables
pgsync table1,table2Works with wildcards as well
pgsync "table*"Sync specific rows (existing rows are overwritten)
pgsync products "where store_id = 1"You can also preserve existing rows
pgsync products "where store_id = 1" --preserveOr truncate them
pgsync products "where store_id = 1" --truncateTables
Exclude specific tables
pgsync --exclude table1,table2Add to .pgsync.yml to exclude by default
exclude:
- table1
- table2Sync tables from all schemas or specific schemas (by default, only the search path is synced)
pgsync --all-schemas
# or
pgsync --schemas public,other
# or
pgsync public.table1,other.table2Groups
Define groups in .pgsync.yml:
groups:
group1:
- table1
- table2And run:
pgsync group1Variables
You can also use groups to sync a specific record and associated records in other tables.
To get product 123 with its reviews, last 10 coupons, and store, use:
groups:
product:
products: "where id = {1}"
reviews: "where product_id = {1}"
coupons: "where product_id = {1} order by created_at desc limit 10"
stores: "where id in (select store_id from products where id = {1})"And run:
pgsync product:123Schema
Sync schema before the data (this wipes out existing data)
pgsync --schema-firstSpecify tables
pgsync table1,table2 --schema-firstOr just the schema
pgsync --schema-onlypgsync does not try to sync Postgres extensions.
Sensitive Data
Prevent sensitive data like email addresses from leaving the remote server.
Define rules in .pgsync.yml:
data_rules:
email: unique_email
last_name: random_letter
birthday: random_date
users.auth_token:
value: secret
visits_count:
statement: "(RANDOM() * 10)::int"
encrypted_*: nulllast_name matches all columns named last_name and users.last_name matches only the users table. Wildcards are supported, and the first matching rule is applied.
Options for replacement are:
unique_emailunique_phoneunique_secretrandom_letterrandom_intrandom_daterandom_timerandom_ipvaluestatementnulluntouched
Rules starting with unique_ require the table to have a single column primary key. unique_phone requires a numeric primary key.
Foreign Keys
Foreign keys can make it difficult to sync data. Three options are:
- Defer constraints (recommended)
- Manually specify the order of tables
- Disable foreign key triggers, which can silently break referential integrity (not recommended)
To defer constraints, use:
pgsync --defer-constraintsTo manually specify the order of tables, use --jobs 1 so tables are synced one-at-a-time.
pgsync table1,table2,table3 --jobs 1To disable foreign key triggers and potentially break referential integrity, use:
pgsync --disable-integrityThis requires superuser privileges on the to database. If syncing to (not from) Amazon RDS, use the rds_superuser role. If syncing to (not from) Heroku, there doesn’t appear to be a way to disable integrity.
Triggers
Disable user triggers with:
pgsync --disable-user-triggersAppend-Only Tables
For extremely large, append-only tables, sync in batches.
pgsync large_table --in-batchesThe script will resume where it left off when run again, making it great for backfills.
Connection Security
Always make sure your connection is secure when connecting to a database over a network you don’t fully trust. Your best option is to connect over SSH or a VPN. Another option is to use sslmode=verify-full. If you don’t do this, your database credentials can be compromised.
Safety
To keep you from accidentally overwriting production, the destination is limited to localhost or 127.0.0.1 by default.
To use another host, add to_safe: true to your .pgsync.yml.
Multiple Databases
To use with multiple databases, run:
pgsync --init db2This creates .pgsync-db2.yml for you to edit. Specify a database in commands with:
pgsync --db db2Integrations
Django
If you run pgsync --init in a Django project, migrations will be excluded in .pgsync.yml.
exclude:
- django_migrationsHeroku
If you run pgsync --init in a Heroku project, the from database will be set in .pgsync.yml.
from: $(heroku config:get DATABASE_URL)?sslmode=requireLaravel
If you run pgsync --init in a Laravel project, migrations will be excluded in .pgsync.yml.
exclude:
- migrationsRails
If you run pgsync --init in a Rails project, Active Record metadata and schema migrations will be excluded in .pgsync.yml.
exclude:
- ar_internal_metadata
- schema_migrationsDebugging
To view the SQL that’s run, use:
pgsync --debugOther Commands
Help
pgsync --helpVersion
pgsync --versionList tables
pgsync --listScripts
Use groups when possible to take advantage of parallelism.
For Ruby scripts, you may need to do:
Bundler.with_unbundled_env do
system "pgsync ..."
endHomebrew
On Mac, you can use:
brew install ankane/brew/pgsyncDependencies
If installation fails, your system may be missing Ruby or libpq.
On Mac, run:
brew install postgresqlOn Ubuntu, run:
sudo apt-get install ruby-dev libpq-dev build-essentialUpgrading
Run:
gem install pgsyncTo use master, run:
gem install specific_install
gem specific_install https://github.com/ankane/pgsync.gitRelated Projects
Also check out:
- Dexter - The automatic indexer for Postgres
- PgHero - A performance dashboard for Postgres
- pgslice - Postgres partitioning as easy as pie
Thanks
Inspired by heroku-pg-transfer.
History
View the changelog
Contributing
Everyone is encouraged to help improve this project. Here are a few ways you can help:
- Report bugs
- Fix bugs and submit pull requests
- Write, clarify, or fix documentation
- Suggest or add new features
To get started with development:
git clone https://github.com/ankane/pgsync.git
cd pgsync
bundle install
createdb pgsync_test1
createdb pgsync_test2
createdb pgsync_test3
bundle exec rake test