48.10. Two-phase Commit Support for Logical Decoding #
With the basic output plugin callbacks (eg., begin_cb
, change_cb
, commit_cb
and message_cb
) two-phase commit commands like PREPARE TRANSACTION
, COMMIT PREPARED
and ROLLBACK PREPARED
are not decoded. While the PREPARE TRANSACTION
is ignored, COMMIT PREPARED
is decoded as a COMMIT
and ROLLBACK PREPARED
is decoded as a ROLLBACK
.
To support the streaming of two-phase commands, an output plugin needs to provide additional callbacks. There are multiple two-phase commit callbacks that are required, (begin_prepare_cb
, prepare_cb
, commit_prepared_cb
, rollback_prepared_cb
and stream_prepare_cb
) and an optional callback (filter_prepare_cb
).
If the output plugin callbacks for decoding two-phase commit commands are provided, then on PREPARE TRANSACTION
, the changes of that transaction are decoded, passed to the output plugin, and the prepare_cb
callback is invoked. This differs from the basic decoding setup where changes are only passed to the output plugin when a transaction is committed. The start of a prepared transaction is indicated by the begin_prepare_cb
callback.
When a prepared transaction is rolled back using the ROLLBACK PREPARED
, then the rollback_prepared_cb
callback is invoked and when the prepared transaction is committed using COMMIT PREPARED
, then the commit_prepared_cb
callback is invoked.
Optionally the output plugin can define filtering rules via filter_prepare_cb
to decode only specific transaction in two phases. This can be achieved by pattern matching on the gid
or via lookups using the xid
.
The users that want to decode prepared transactions need to be careful about below mentioned points:
If the prepared transaction has locked [user] catalog tables exclusively then decoding prepare can block till the main transaction is committed.
The logical replication solution that builds distributed two phase commit using this feature can deadlock if the prepared transaction has locked [user] catalog tables exclusively. To avoid this users must refrain from having locks on catalog tables (e.g. explicit
LOCK
command) in such transactions. See Section 48.8.2 for the details.