DROP SUBSCRIPTION
DROP SUBSCRIPTION — remove a subscription
Synopsis
DROP SUBSCRIPTION [ IF EXISTS ] name
[ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
Description
DROP SUBSCRIPTION
removes a subscription from the database cluster.
A subscription can only be dropped by a superuser.
DROP SUBSCRIPTION
cannot be executed inside a transaction block if the subscription is associated with a replication slot. (You can use ALTER SUBSCRIPTION
to unset the slot.)
Parameters
name
The name of a subscription to be dropped.
CASCADE
RESTRICT
These key words do not have any effect, since there are no dependencies on subscriptions.
Notes
When dropping a subscription that is associated with a replication slot on the remote host (the normal state), DROP SUBSCRIPTION
will connect to the remote host and try to drop the replication slot (and any remaining table synchronization slots) as part of its operation. This is necessary so that the resources allocated for the subscription on the remote host are released. If this fails, either because the remote host is not reachable or because the remote replication slot cannot be dropped or does not exist or never existed, the DROP SUBSCRIPTION
command will fail. To proceed in this situation, first disable the subscription by executing ALTER SUBSCRIPTION ... DISABLE
, and then disassociate it from the replication slot by executing ALTER SUBSCRIPTION ... SET (slot_name = NONE)
. After that, DROP SUBSCRIPTION
will no longer attempt any actions on a remote host. Note that if the remote replication slot still exists, it (and any related table synchronization slots) should then be dropped manually; otherwise it/they will continue to reserve WAL and might eventually cause the disk to fill up. See also Section 31.2.1.
If a subscription is associated with a replication slot, then DROP SUBSCRIPTION
cannot be executed inside a transaction block.
Examples
Drop a subscription:
DROP SUBSCRIPTION mysub;
Compatibility
DROP SUBSCRIPTION
is a PostgreSQL extension.