Migrating Data with gptransfer

Information about the gptransfer migration utility, which transfers Greenplum Database metadata and data from one Greenplum database to another.

Note: Greenplum Database provides two utilities for migrating data between Greenplum Database installations, gpcopy and gptransfer. Use gpcopy to migrate data to a Greenplum Database cluster version 5.9.0 and later. Use the gptransfer utility to migrate data between Greenplum Database installations running software version 5.8.0 or earlier.

The gptransfer utiltiy is deprecated and will be removed in the next major release of Greenplum Database. For information about migrating data with gpcopy, see Migrating Data with gpcopy.

The gptransfer migration utility transfers Greenplum Database metadata and data from one Greenplum database to another Greenplum database, allowing you to migrate the entire contents of a database, or just selected tables, to another database. The source and destination databases may be in the same or a different cluster. Data is transferred in parallel across all the segments, using the gpfdist data loading utility to attain the highest transfer rates.

gptransfer handles the setup and execution of the data transfer. Participating clusters must already exist, have network access between all hosts in both clusters, and have certificate-authenticated ssh access between all hosts in both clusters.

The interface includes options to transfer one or more full databases, or one or more database tables. A full database transfer includes the database schema, table data, indexes, views, roles, user-defined functions, and resource queues. Configuration files, including postgresql.conf and pg_hba.conf, must be transferred manually by an administrator. Extensions installed in the database with gppkg, such as MADlib, must be installed in the destination database by an administrator.

See the Greenplum Database Utility Guide for complete syntax and usage information for the gptransfer utility.

Prerequisites

  • The gptransfer utility can only be used with Greenplum Database. Apache HAWQ is not supported as a source or destination.
  • The source and destination Greenplum clusters must both be version 4.2 or higher.
  • At least one Greenplum instance must include the gptransfer utility in its distribution. If neither the source or destination includes gptransfer, you must upgrade one of the clusters to use gptransfer.
  • Run the gptransfer utility either from the source or the destination cluster.
  • If you are transferring data between two different clusters, the number of segment instances in the destination cluster must be greater than or equal to the number of segment hosts in the source cluster. The number of segment hosts in the destination cluster may be smaller than the number of segment hosts in the source, but the data will transfer at a slower rate.
  • The segment hosts in both clusters must have network connectivity with each other.
  • Every host in both clusters must be able to connect to every other host with certificate-authenticated SSH. You can use the gpssh_exkeys utility to exchange public keys between the hosts of both clusters.

What gptransfer Does

gptransfer uses writable and readable external tables, the Greenplum gpfdist parallel data-loading utility, and named pipes to transfer data from the source database to the destination database. Segments on the source cluster select from the source database table and insert into a writable external table. Segments in the destination cluster select from a readable external table and insert into the destination database table. The writable and readable external tables are backed by named pipes on the source cluster’s segment hosts, and each named pipe has a gpfdist process serving the pipe’s output to the readable external table on the destination segments.

gptransfer orchestrates the process by processing the database objects to be transferred in batches. For each table to be transferred, it performs the following tasks:

  • creates a writable external table in the source database
  • creates a readable external table in the destination database
  • creates named pipes and gpfdist processes on segment hosts in the source cluster
  • executes a SELECT INTO statement in the source database to insert the source data into the writable external table
  • executes a SELECT INTO statement in the destination database to insert the data from the readable external table into the destination table
  • optionally validates the data by comparing row counts or MD5 hashes of the rows in the source and destination
  • cleans up the external tables, named pipes, and gpfdist processes

Fast Mode and Slow Mode

gptransfer sets up data transfer using the gpfdist parallel file serving utility, which serves the data evenly to the destination segments. Running more gpfdist processes increases the parallelism and the data transfer rate. When the destination cluster has the same or a greater number of segments than the source cluster, gptransfer sets up one named pipe and one gpfdist process for each source segment. This is the configuration for optimal data transfer rates and is called fast mode. The following figure illustrates a setup on a segment host when the destination cluster has at least as many segments as the source cluster.

Destination cluster with same segments as source cluster

The configuration of the input end of the named pipes differs when there are fewer segments in the destination cluster than in the source cluster. gptransfer handles this alternative setup automatically. The difference in configuration means that transferring data into a destination cluster with fewer segments than the source cluster is not as fast as transferring into a destination cluster of the same or greater size. It is called slow mode because there are fewer gpfdist processes serving the data to the destination cluster, although the transfer is still quite fast with one gpfdist per segment host.

When the destination cluster is smaller than the source cluster, there is one named pipe per segment host and all segments on the host send their data through it. The segments on the source host write their data to a writable external web table connected to a gpfdist process on the input end of the named pipe. This consolidates the table data into a single named pipe. A gpfdist process on the output of the named pipe serves the consolidated data to the destination cluster. The following figure illustrates this configuration.

gpfdist using named pipe to serve consolidated data

On the destination side, gptransfer defines a readable external table with the gpfdist server on the source host as input and selects from the readable external table into the destination table. The data is distributed evenly to all the segments in the destination cluster.

Batch Size and Sub-batch Size

The degree of parallelism of a gptransfer execution is determined by two command-line options: --batch-size and --sub-batch-size. The --batch-size option specifies the number of tables to transfer in a batch. The default batch size is 2, which means that two table transfers are in process at any time. The minimum batch size is 1 and the maximum is 10. The --sub-batch-size parameter specifies the maximum number of parallel sub-processes to start to do the work of transferring a table. The default is 25 and the maximum is 50. The product of the batch size and sub-batch size is the amount of parallelism. If set to the defaults, for example, gptransfer can perform 50 concurrent tasks. Each thread is a Python process and consumes memory, so setting these values too high can cause a Python Out of Memory error. For this reason, the batch sizes should be tuned for your environment.

Preparing Hosts for gptransfer

When you install a Greenplum Database cluster, you set up all the master and segment hosts so that the Greenplum Database administrative user (gpadmin) can connect with SSH from every host in the cluster to any other host in the cluster without providing a password. The gptransfer utility requires this capability between every host in the source and destination clusters. First, ensure that the clusters have network connectivity with each other. Then, prepare a hosts file containing a list of all the hosts in both clusters, and use the gpssh-exkeys utility to exchange keys. See the reference for gpssh-exkeys in the Greenplum Database Utility Guide.

The host map file is a text file that lists the segment hosts in the source cluster. It is used to enable communication between the hosts in Greenplum clusters. The file is specified on the gptransfer command line with the --source-map-file=*host\_map\_file* command option. It is a required option when using gptransfer to copy data between two separate Greenplum clusters.

The file contains a list in the following format:

  1. host1_name,host1_ip_addr
  2. host2_name,host2_ipaddr
  3. ...

The file uses IP addresses instead of host names to avoid any problems with name resolution between the clusters.

Limitations

gptransfer transfers data from user databases only; the postgres, template0, and template1 databases cannot be transferred. Administrators must transfer configuration files manually and install extensions into the destination database with gppkg.

The destination cluster must have at least as many segments as the source cluster has segment hosts. Transferring data to a smaller cluster is not as fast as transferring data to a larger cluster.

Transferring small or empty tables can be unexpectedly slow. There is significant fixed overhead in setting up external tables and communications processes for parallel data loading between segments that occurs whether or not there is actual data to transfer. It can be more efficient to transfer the schema and smaller tables to the destination database using other methods, then use gptransfer with the -t option to transfer large tables.

When transferring data between databases, you can run only one instance of gptransfer at a time.Running multiple, concurrent instances of gptransfer is not supported.

Full Mode and Table Mode

When run with the --full option, gptransfer copies all user-created databases, tables, views, indexes, roles, user-defined functions, and resource queues in the source cluster to the destination cluster. The destination system cannot contain any user-defined databases, only the default databases postgres, template0, and template1. If gptransfer finds a database on the destination it fails with a message like the following:

  1. [ERROR]:- gptransfer: error: --full option specified but tables exist on destination system

Note: The --full option cannot be specified with the -t, -d, -f, or --partition-transfer options.

To copy tables individually, specify the tables using either the -t command-line option (one option per table) or by using the -f command-line option to specify a file containing a list of tables to transfer. Tables are specified in the fully-qualified format *database*.*schema*.*table*. The table definition, indexes, and table data are copied. The database must already exist on the destination cluster.

By default, gptransfer fails if you attempt to transfer a table that already exists in the destination database:

  1. [INFO]:-Validating transfer table set...
  2. [CRITICAL]:- gptransfer failed. (Reason='Table *database.schema.table* exists in database *database* .') exiting...

Override this behavior with the --skip-existing, --truncate, or --drop options.

The following table shows the objects that are copied in full mode and table mode.

ObjectFull ModeTable Mode
DataYesYes
IndexesYesYes
RolesYesNo
FunctionsYesNo
Resource QueuesYesNo
postgresql.confNoNo
pg_hba.confNoNo
gppkgNoNo

The --full option and the --schema-only option can be used together if you want to copy databases in phases, for example, during scheduled periods of downtime or low activity. Run gptransfer --full --schema-only ... to create the databases on the destination cluster, but with no data. Then you can transfer the tables in stages during scheduled down times or periods of low activity. Be sure to include the --truncate or --drop option when you later transfer tables to prevent the transfer from failing because the table already exists at the destination.

Locking

The -x option enables table locking. An exclusive lock is placed on the source table until the copy and validation, if requested, are complete.

Validation

By default, gptransfer does not validate the data transferred. You can request validation using the --validate=*type* option. The validation type can be one of the following:

  • count – Compares the row counts for the tables in the source and destination databases.
  • md5 – Sorts tables on both source and destination, and then performs a row-by-row comparison of the MD5 hashes of the sorted rows.

If the database is accessible during the transfer, be sure to add the -x option to lock the table. Otherwise, the table could be modified during the transfer, causing validation to fail.

Failed Transfers

A failure on a table does not end the gptransfer job. When a transfer fails, gptransfer displays an error message and adds the table name to a failed transfers file. At the end of the gptransfer session, gptransfer writes a message telling you there were failures, and providing the name of the failed transfer file. For example:

  1. [WARNING]:-Some tables failed to transfer. A list of these tables
  2. [WARNING]:-has been written to the file failed_transfer_tables_20140808_101813.txt
  3. [WARNING]:-This file can be used with the -f option to continue

The failed transfers file is in the format required by the -f option, so you can use it to start a new gptransfer session to retry the failed transfers.

Best Practices

gptransfer creates a configuration that allows transferring large amounts of data at very high rates. For small or empty tables, however, the gptransfer set up and clean up are too expensive. The best practice is to use gptransfer for large tables and to use other methods for copying smaller tables.

  1. Before you begin to transfer data, replicate the schema or schemas from the source cluster to the destination cluster. Options for copying the schema include:
    • Use the PostgreSQL pg_dump or pg_dumpall utility with the –-schema-only option.
    • DDL scripts, or any other method for recreating schema in the destination database.
  2. Divide the non-empty tables to be transferred into large and small categories, using criteria of your own choice. For example, you could decide large tables have more than one million rows or a raw data size greater than 1GB.
  3. Transfer data for small tables using the SQL COPY command. This eliminates the warm-up/cool-down time each table incurs when using the gptransfer utility.
    • Optionally, write or reuse existing shell scripts to loop through a list of table names to copy with the COPY command.
  4. Use gptransfer to transfer the large table data in batches of tables.
    • It is best to transfer to the same size cluster or to a larger cluster so that gptransfer runs in fast mode.
    • If any indexes exist, drop them before starting the transfer process.
    • Use the gptransfer table (-t) or file (-f) options to execute the migration in batches of tables. Do not run gptransfer using the full mode; the schema and smaller tables have already been transferred.
    • Perform test runs of the gptransfer process before the production migration. This ensures tables can be transferred successfully. You can experiment with the --batch-size and --sub-batch-size options to obtain maximum parallelism. Determine proper batching of tables for iterative gptransfer runs.
    • Include the --skip-existing option because the schema already exists on the destination cluster.
    • Use only fully qualified table names. Be aware that periods (.), whitespace, quotes (‘) and double quotes (“) in table names may cause problems.
    • If you decide to use the --validation option to validate the data after transfer, be sure to also use the -x option to place an exclusive lock on the source table.
  5. After all tables are transferred, perform the following tasks:
    • Check for and correct any failed transfers.
    • Recreate the indexes that were dropped before the transfer.
    • Ensure any roles, functions, and resource queues are created in the destination database. These objects are not transferred when you use the gptransfer -t option.
    • Copy the postgresql.conf and pg_hba.conf configuration files from the source to the destination cluster.
    • Install needed extensions in the destination database with gppkg.

Parent topic: Greenplum Database Best Practices