.. _migrating_to_pgsql: Postgres to Postgres ==================== This command instructs pgloader to load data from a database connection. Automatic discovery of the schema is supported, including build of the indexes, primary and foreign keys constraints. A default set of casting rules are provided and might be overloaded and appended to by the command. For a complete Postgres to Postgres solution including Change Data Capture support with Logical Decoding, see `pgcopydb`__. __ https://pgcopydb.readthedocs.io/ Using default settings ---------------------- Here is the simplest command line example, which might be all you need: :: $ pgloader pgsql://user@source/dbname pgsql://user@target/dbname Using advanced options and a load command file ---------------------------------------------- Here's a short example of migrating a database from a PostgreSQL server to another. The command would then be: :: $ pgloader pg.load And the contents of the command file ``pg.load`` could be inspired from the following: :: load database from pgsql://localhost/pgloader into pgsql://localhost/copy including only table names matching 'bits', ~/utilisateur/ in schema 'mysql' including only table names matching ~/geolocations/ in schema 'public' ; Common Clauses -------------- Please refer to :ref:`common_clauses` for documentation about common clauses. PostgreSQL Database Source Specification: FROM ---------------------------------------------- Must be a connection URL pointing to a PostgreSQL database. See the `SOURCE CONNECTION STRING` section above for details on how to write the connection string. :: pgsql://[user[:password]@][netloc][:port][/dbname][?option=value&...] PostgreSQL Database Migration Options: WITH ------------------------------------------- When loading from a `PostgreSQL` database, the following options are supported, and the default *WITH* clause is: *no truncate*, *create schema*, *create tables*, *include drop*, *create indexes*, *reset sequences*, *foreign keys*, *downcase identifiers*, *uniquify index names*, *reindex*. - *include drop* When this option is listed, pgloader drops all the tables in the target PostgreSQL database whose names appear in the MySQL database. This option allows for using the same command several times in a row until you figure out all the options, starting automatically from a clean environment. Please note that `CASCADE` is used to ensure that tables are dropped even if there are foreign keys pointing to them. This is precisely what `include drop` is intended to do: drop all target tables and recreate them. Great care needs to be taken when using `include drop`, as it will cascade to *all* objects referencing the target tables, possibly including other tables that are not being loaded from the source DB. - *include no drop* When this option is listed, pgloader will not include any `DROP` statement when loading the data. - *truncate* When this option is listed, pgloader issue the `TRUNCATE` command against each PostgreSQL table just before loading data into it. - *no truncate* When this option is listed, pgloader issues no `TRUNCATE` command. - *disable triggers* When this option is listed, pgloader issues an `ALTER TABLE ... DISABLE TRIGGER ALL` command against the PostgreSQL target table before copying the data, then the command `ALTER TABLE ... ENABLE TRIGGER ALL` once the `COPY` is done. This option allows loading data into a pre-existing table ignoring the *foreign key constraints* and user defined triggers and may result in invalid *foreign key constraints* once the data is loaded. Use with care. - *create tables* When this option is listed, pgloader creates the table using the meta data found in the `MySQL` file, which must contain a list of fields with their data type. A standard data type conversion from DBF to PostgreSQL is done. - *create no tables* When this option is listed, pgloader skips the creation of table before loading data, target tables must then already exist. Also, when using *create no tables* pgloader fetches the metadata from the current target database and checks type casting, then will remove constraints and indexes prior to loading the data and install them back again once the loading is done. - *create indexes* When this option is listed, pgloader gets the definitions of all the indexes found in the MySQL database and create the same set of index definitions against the PostgreSQL database. - *create no indexes* When this option is listed, pgloader skips the creating indexes. - *drop indexes* When this option is listed, pgloader drops the indexes in the target database before loading the data, and creates them again at the end of the data copy. - *reindex* When this option is used, pgloader does both *drop indexes* before loading the data and *create indexes* once data is loaded. - *drop schema* When this option is listed, pgloader drops the target schema in the target PostgreSQL database before creating it again and all the objects it contains. The default behavior doesn't drop the target schemas. - *foreign keys* When this option is listed, pgloader gets the definitions of all the foreign keys found in the MySQL database and create the same set of foreign key definitions against the PostgreSQL database. - *no foreign keys* When this option is listed, pgloader skips creating foreign keys. - *reset sequences* When this option is listed, at the end of the data loading and after the indexes have all been created, pgloader resets all the PostgreSQL sequences created to the current maximum value of the column they are attached to. The options *schema only* and *data only* have no effects on this option. - *reset no sequences* When this option is listed, pgloader skips resetting sequences after the load. The options *schema only* and *data only* have no effects on this option. - *downcase identifiers* When this option is listed, pgloader converts all MySQL identifiers (table names, index names, column names) to *downcase*, except for PostgreSQL *reserved* keywords. The PostgreSQL *reserved* keywords are determined dynamically by using the system function `pg_get_keywords()`. - *quote identifiers* When this option is listed, pgloader quotes all MySQL identifiers so that their case is respected. Note that you will then have to do the same thing in your application code queries. - *schema only* When this option is listed pgloader refrains from migrating the data over. Note that the schema in this context includes the indexes when the option *create indexes* has been listed. - *data only* When this option is listed pgloader only issues the `COPY` statements, without doing any other processing. - *rows per range* How many rows are fetched per `SELECT` query when using *multiple readers per thread*, see above for details. PostgreSQL Database Casting Rules --------------------------------- The command *CAST* introduces user-defined casting rules. The cast clause allows to specify custom casting rules, either to overload the default casting rules or to amend them with special cases. A casting rule is expected to follow one of the forms:: type [ ... ] to [