On 24/05/17 21:21, Petr Jelinek wrote:
> On 24/05/17 21:07, Euler Taveira wrote:
>> 2017-05-23 6:00 GMT-03:00 tushar <tushar.ahuja@enterprisedb.com
>> <mailto:tushar.ahuja@enterprisedb.com>>:
>>
>>
>> s=# alter subscription s1 set publication skip refresh ;
>> NOTICE: removed subscription for table public.t
>> NOTICE: removed subscription for table public.t1
>> ALTER SUBSCRIPTION
>> s=#
>>
>>
>> That's a design flaw. Since SKIP is not a reserved word, parser consider
>> it as a publication name. Instead of causing an error, it executes
>> another command (REFRESH) that is the opposite someone expects. Also, as
>> "skip" is not a publication name, it removes all tables in the subscription.
>>
>
> Ah that explains why I originally added the ugly NOREFRESH keyword.
>
>> ALTER SUBSCRIPTION name SET PUBLICATION publication_name_list SKIP REFRESH
>> ALTER SUBSCRIPTION name SET PUBLICATION publication_name_list REFRESH
>> opt_definition
>>
>> I think the first command was a bad design. Why don't we transform SKIP
>> REFRESH into a REFRESH option?
>>
>> ALTER SUBSCRIPTION sub1 SET PUBLICATION pub1 REFRESH WITH (skip = true);
>>
>> skip (boolean): specifies that the command will not try to refresh table
>> information. The default is false.
>
> That's quite confusing IMHO, saying REFRESH but then adding option to
> actually not refresh is not a good interface.
>
> I wonder if we actually need the SKIP REFRESH syntax, there is the
> "REFRESH [ WITH ... ]" when user wants to refresh, so if REFRESH is not
> specified, we can just behave as if SKIP REFRESH was used, it's not like
> there is 3rd possible behavior.
>
Attached patch does exactly that.
--
Petr Jelinek http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
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