ora_migrator is a plugin for db_migrator that uses
oracle_fdw to migrate an Oracle database to PostgreSQL.
Please read the db_migrator documentation for usage instructions;
this README only covers the installation and setup of the plugin
as well as additional features that are not covered in the general
documentation.
In addition to that, ora_migrator offers a replication functionality
from Oracle to PostgreSQL which can be used for almost zero down time
migration from Oracle. See Replication for details.
Note that since schema names are usually in upper case in Oracle,
you will need to use upper case schema names for the only_schemas
parameter of the db_migrator functions.
The following option can be used for db_migrate_prepare,
db_migrate_mkforeign and db_migrate:
max_long(integer, default value 32767): will be used to set themax_longoption on the foreign tables. This determines the maximal length of LONG, LONG RAW and XMLTYPE columns.
-
You need PostgreSQL 9.5 or later.
-
The
oracle_fdwanddb_migratorextensions must be installed. -
A foreign server must be defined for the Oracle database you want to access.
-
The user who calls the
create_oraviewsfunction to create the foreign tables must have theUSAGEprivilege on the foreign server. -
A user mapping must exist for the user who calls the
create_oraviewsfunction. -
The Oracle user used in the user mapping must have privileges to read the following Oracle dictionary views:
DBA_COL_PRIVSDBA_CONS_COLUMNSDBA_CONSTRAINTSDBA_IND_COLUMNSDBA_IND_EXPRESSIONSDBA_INDEXESDBA_MVIEWSDBA_MVIEW_LOGSDBA_PROCEDURESDBA_SEGMENTSDBA_SEQUENCESDBA_SOURCEDBA_TAB_COLUMNSDBA_TAB_PRIVSDBA_TABLESDBA_TRIGGERSDBA_USERSDBA_VIEWS
You can choose to grant the user the
SELECT ANY DICTIONARYsystem privilege instead, which includes all of the above. -
To use replication, the user must have the
CREATE TABLEandCREATE TRIGGERprivileges.To use replication for tables not owned by the Oracle user, the user must have the
CREATE ANY TABLE,CREATE ANY INDEX,CREATE ANY TRIGGER,DROP ANY TABLE,DROP ANY TRIGGERandSELECT ANY TABLEprivilege (this is required to create and drop logging tables and triggers).
The extension files must be placed in the extension subdirectory of
the PostgreSQL shared files directory, which can be found with
pg_config --sharedir
If the extension building infrastructure PGXS is installed, you can do that simply with
make install
The extension is installed with the SQL command
CREATE EXTENSION ora_migrator;
This statement can be executed by any user with the right to create
functions in the public schema (or the schema you specified in the
optional SCHEMA clause of CREATE EXTENSION).
The db_migrator callback function db_migrator_callback() returns the
migration functions provided by the extension.
See the db_migrator documentation for details.
The "metadata view creation function" create_oraviews creates some
additional objects in the FDW stage that provide information that will be
helpful for Oracle migrations:
packages (
schema text NOT NULL,
package_name text NOT NULL,
is_body boolean NOT NULL,
source text NOT NULL
)
is_bodyisFALSEfor the package definition andTRUEfor the package body definition
This view can be used to make the transation of package code easier.
segments (
schema text NOT NULL,
segment_name text NOT NULL,
segment_type text NOT NULL,
bytes bigint NOT NULL
)
This foreign table is most useful for assessing the size of tables and indexes in Oracle.
migration_cost_estimate (
schema text NOT NULL,
task_type text NOT NULL,
task_content bigint NOT NULL,
task_unit text NOT NULL,
migration_hours integer NOT NULL
)
-
task_typeis one oftables,data_migration,functions,triggers,packagesandviews. -
task_contentis the quantity for this taks type -
task_unitis the unit oftask_content -
migration_hoursis a rough estimate of the hours it may take to complete this task
This view can help to assess the migration costs for an Oracle database.
table_comments (
schema text NOT NULL,
table_name text NOT NULL,
table_comment text
)
Table comments for the Oracle tables. If there is no comment, table_comment
is NULL.
column_comments (
schema text NOT NULL,
table_name text NOT NULL,
column_name text NOT NULL,
comment text
)
Column comments for the Oracle tables. If there is no comment, comment is
NULL.
This function tests an Oracle table for potential migration problems.
You have to run it after db_migrate_prepare.
The parameters are:
-
server: the name of the Oracle foreign server -
schema: the schema name -
table_name: the table name -
pgstage_schema(defaultpgsql_stage): The name of the PostgreSQL stage created bydb_migrate_prepare.
schema and table_name must be values from the columns of the same name
of the tables table in the PostgreSQL stage.
This is a table function and returns the Oracle ROWID of the problematic rows as well as a message describing the problem.
Currently there are tests for two problems:
-
zero bytes
chr(0)in string columns -
values in string columns that are not in the database encoding
This function calls oracle_test_table for all tables in the
PostgreSQL staging schema and records the results in the table test_error
in the FDW stage (after emptying the table).
In addition, an error summary is added to the table test_error_stats
in the FDW stage. This is useful for measuring the progress of
cleaning up bad data in Oracle over time.
The function returns the total number of errors encountered.
The function parameters are:
-
server: the name of the Oracle foreign server -
staging_schema(defaultfdw_stage): name of the remote staging schema -
pgstage_schema(defaultpgsql_stage): The name of the PostgreSQL stage created byoracle_migrate_prepare. -
only_schemas(default NULL): An array of Oracle schema names that should be migrated to PostgreSQL. If NULL, all schemas except Oracle system schemas are processed. The names must be as they appear in Oracle, which is usually in upper case.
These tables contain individual and summary results for runs of
oracle_migrate_test_data.
This function creates all the objects necessary for replication in the Oracle and PostgreSQL databases. PostgreSQL objects will be created in the Postgres staging schema, Oracle objects in the same schema as the replicated table.
This function should be called right before db_migrate_tables, and no
data modification activity should occur on Oracle between the time when you
start oracle_replication_start and the time you call db_migrate_tables.
The function parameters are:
-
server: the name of the Oracle foreign server -
pgstage_schema(defaultpgsql_stage): The name of the PostgreSQL stage created byoracle_migrate_prepare
The objects created by the function are:
-
a PostgreSQL foreign table
__ReplicationEndthat shows a timestamp guaranteed to be earlier than the oldest active transaction on Oracle -
a PostgreSQL table
__ReplicationStartused to store the starting point for the next replication catch-up
For each table in the tables table of the Postgres stage that has migrate
set to TRUE, the following objects are created:
-
an Oracle table
__Log_<tablename>to collect changes to<tablename> -
an Oracle trigger
__Log_<tablename>_TRIGon<tablename> -
a PostgreSQL foreign table
__Log_<schema>/<tablename>for the Oracle change log table
Copies data that have changed during a certain time interval from an Oracle table to PostgreSQL.
This requires that oracle_replication_start has created the required objects
and that the data migration has finished.
Parameters:
-
schema: the schema of the migrated table -
table_name: the name of the migrated table -
from_ts: replicate changes later than that timestamp -
to_ts: replicate changes up to and including that timestamp
This is a "low level" function called by oracle_replication_catchup; it can
be used if you want to parallelize catch-up by running it concurrently
for different tables.
Parameters:
-
schema: the schema of the migrated sequence -
sequence_name: the name of the migrated sequence -
staging_schema(defaultfdw_stage): name of the remote staging schema
Queries the current value of the Oracle sequence on the remote side and sets the migrated sequence to that value.
Copies all changes in all Oracle tables and sequences since the last catch-up to PostgreSQL.
The start timestamp is taken from __ReplicationStart, the end from
__ReplicationEnd (which contains the latest safe timestamp).
After successful completion, the replicaton end time is saved in
__ReplicationStart for the next time.
Parameters:
-
staging_schema(defaultfdw_stage): name of the remote staging schema -
pgstage_schema(defaultpgsql_stage): The name of the PostgreSQL stage created byoracle_migrate_prepare
You can call this function anytime after oracle_replication_start has
completed.
Unless you have no triggers or foreign key constraints in your database,
you should set the configuration parameter session_replication_role to
replica when calling this function. Then triggers don't fire, and
foreign key constraints are not checked.
oracle_replication_catchup uses the SERIALIZABLE isolation level on
Oracle, so it sees a fixed snapshot of the Oracle database, and the data
will be consistent on the PostgreSQL side, even if the Oracle database is
modified concurrently.
If you want to use replication for near-zero down time migration, call it twice in short succession and make sure that there is no data modification activity on Oracle during the second call. Once the second catch-up has completed, you can switch the application over to PostgreSQL immediately.
Removes all objects created by oracle_replication_start in PostgreSQL
and Oracle.
This is used to clean up after you have finished migrating from Oracle.
-
server: the name of the Oracle foreign server -
pgstage_schema(defaultpgsql_stage): The name of the PostgreSQL stage created byoracle_migrate_prepare
Not all Oracle partitioning options are supported by ora_migrator.
Only list, hash and range partitioning are supported in PostgreSQL, so other
partitioning strategies are not supported. Also, list and range
partitioning with a partitioning key with two or more columns is not
supported. When ora_migrator encounters a partitioning schema that it
cannot migrate, it will migrate the table to an unpartitioned table.
ora_migrator offers a simple trigger-based replication functionality
from Oracle to PostgreSQL.
This can be used to migrate databases from Oracle to PostgreSQL with almost no down time.
The procedure is as follows:
-
Prepare migration as described in the
db_migratordocumentation by callingdb_migrate_prepareanddb_migrate_mkforeign. -
Suspend all data modification activity on the Oracle database. This is necessary because Oracle does not support transactional DDL.
-
Then call
oracle_replication_startto set up all the required objects. This will create log tables and triggers in the Oracle database. -
Then start the data migration as usual with
db_migrate_tables.As soon as
db_migrate_tableshas started, data modification activity on the Oracle database can resume. The migration will run using theSERIALIZABLEtransaction isolation level, so the migrated data will be consistent.Make sure that you have enough UNDO space on Oracle, else the data migration may fail.
-
Migrate constraints and indexes with
db_migrate_constraintsand other objects as described in thedb_migratordocumentation. -
At any time, you can call
oracle_replication_catchupto transfer changed data from Oracle to PostgreSQL.This calls
oracle_catchup_tablefor all affected tables, so to parallelize operation, you can call that latter function directly for all affected tables.Note that catching up will not purge the log tables on Oracle.
To avoid problems with foreign key constraints in PostgreSQL, make sure that the configuration parameter
session_replication_roleis set toreplicawhile you are runningoracle_catchup_table.For near-zero down time migration, the last call to
oracle_replication_catchupmust also be performed while there is no data modification activity on the Oracle database. After that call, switch the application over to PostgreSQL. -
To end replication, call
oracle_replication_finish. That will delete all the objects created for replication. -
Finally, call
db_migrate_finishto drop all auxiliary objects.
You need to prepare an Oracle database by running the script ora_mktest.sql.
That will create the users testschema1 and testschema2 and some tables
and other objects in the respective schemas.
The Oracle server must be accessible with an empty connect string, like
sqlplus testschema1/good_password
So either the server is local and you set the ORACLE_SID environment
variable, or you set the TWO_TASK environment variable for a remote
connection.
To run the regression tests, you have to install db_migrator and
ora_migrator (make install). Create a PostgreSQL cluster with initdb
and start it. Make sure that the environment of the PostgreSQL server is
set up for a connection with an empty connection string as described above.
Then you can start the regression tests from the ora_migrator software
directory with
make installcheck
That will exercise the tests in the sql directory and compare with the
results in expected. For details, see the end of the documentation on
the Extension Building Infrastructure.
Create an issue on Github or contact CYBERTEC PostgreSQL International GmbH.