oracle_fdw is a PostgreSQL extension that provides a Foreign Data Wrapper for easy and efficient access to Oracle databases, including pushdown of WHERE conditions and required columns as well as comprehensive EXPLAIN support.
This README contains the following sections:
oracle_fdw was written by Laurenz Albe, with notable contributions from Vincent Mora of Oslandia and Tatsuro Yamada of the NTT OSS Center.
Special thanks to Christian Ullrich for ongoing help with Windows.
This is a simple example how to use oracle_fdw.
More detailed information will be provided in the sections
Options and Usage. You should also read the
PostgreSQL documentation on foreign data and the commands referenced
there.
For the sake of this example, let's assume you can connect as operating system
user postgres
(or whoever starts the PostgreSQL server) with the following
command:
sqlplus orauser/orapwd@//dbserver.mydomain.com:1521/ORADB
That means that the Oracle client and the environment is set up correctly. I also assume that oracle_fdw has been compiled and installed (see the Installation section).
We want to access a table defined like this:
SQL> DESCRIBE oratab
Name Null? Type
------------------------------- -------- ------------
ID NOT NULL NUMBER(5)
TEXT VARCHAR2(30)
FLOATING NOT NULL NUMBER(7,2)
Then configure oracle_fdw as PostgreSQL superuser like this:
pgdb=# CREATE EXTENSION oracle_fdw;
pgdb=# CREATE SERVER oradb FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER oracle_fdw
OPTIONS (dbserver '//dbserver.mydomain.com:1521/ORADB');
(You can use other naming methods or local connections, see the description of the option dbserver below.)
It is a good idea to use a superuser only where really necessary, so let's allow a normal user to use the foreign server (this is not required for the example to work, but I recommend it):
pgdb=# GRANT USAGE ON FOREIGN SERVER oradb TO pguser;
Then you can connect to PostgreSQL as pguser
and define:
pgdb=> CREATE USER MAPPING FOR pguser SERVER oradb
OPTIONS (user 'orauser', password 'orapwd');
(You can use external authentication to avoid storing Oracle passwords; see below.)
pgdb=> CREATE FOREIGN TABLE oratab (
id integer OPTIONS (key 'true') NOT NULL,
text character varying(30),
floating double precision NOT NULL
) SERVER oradb OPTIONS (schema 'ORAUSER', table 'ORATAB');
(Remember that table and schema name -- the latter is optional -- must normally be in uppercase.)
Now you can use the table like a regular PostgreSQL table.
FUNCTION oracle_fdw_handler() RETURNS fdw_handler
FUNCTION oracle_fdw_validator(text[], oid) RETURNS void
These functions are the handler and the validator function necessary to create a foreign data wrapper.
FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER oracle_fdw
HANDLER oracle_fdw_handler
VALIDATOR oracle_fdw_validator
The extension automatically creates a foreign data wrapper named oracle_fdw
.
Normally that's all you need, and you can proceed to define foreign servers.
You can create additional Oracle foreign data wrappers, for example if you
need to set the nls_lang option (you can alter the existing oracle_fdw
wrapper, but all modifications will be lost after a dump/restore).
FUNCTION oracle_close_connections() RETURNS void
This function can be used to close all open Oracle connections in this session. See the Usage section for further description.
FUNCTION oracle_diag(name DEFAULT NULL) RETURNS text
This function is useful for diagnostic purposes only.
It will return the versions of oracle_fdw, PostgreSQL server and Oracle client.
If called with no argument or NULL, it will additionally return the values of
some environment variables used for establishing Oracle connections.
If called with the name of a foreign server, it will additionally return
the Oracle server version.
FUNCTION oracle_execute(server name, stmt text) RETURNS void
This function can be used to execute arbitrary SQL statements on the remote Oracle server. That will only work with statements that do not return results (typically DDL statements).
Be careful when using this function, since it might disturb the transaction management of oracle_fdw. Remember that running a DDL statement in Oracle will issue an implicit COMMIT. You are best advised to use this function outside of multi-statement transactions.
(Caution: If you modify the default foreign data wrapper oracle_fdw
,
any changes will be lost upon dump/restore. Create a new foreign data wrapper
if you want the options to be persistent. The SQL script shipped with the
software contains a CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER statement you can use.)
nls_lang (optional)
Sets the NLS_LANG environment variable for Oracle to this value.
NLS_LANG is in the form "language_territory.charset" (for example
AMERICAN_AMERICA.AL32UTF8). This must match your database encoding.
When this value is not set, oracle_fdw will automatically do the right
thing if it can and issue a warning if it cannot. Set this only if you
know what you are doing. See the Problems section.
dbserver (required)
The Oracle database connection string for the remote database.
This can be in any of the forms that Oracle supports as long as your
Oracle client is configured accordingly.
Set this to an empty string for local ("BEQUEATH") connections.
isolation_level (optional, defaults to serializable
)
The transaction isolation level to use at the Oracle database.
The value can be serializable
, read_committed
or read_only
.
Note that the Oracle table can be queried more than once during a single
PostgreSQL statement (for example, during a nested loop join). To make
sure that no inconsistencies caused by race conditions with concurrent
transactions can occur, the transaction isolation level must guarantee
read stability.
This is only guaranteed with Oracle's SERIALIZABLE or READ ONLY isolation
levels.
Unfortunately Oracle's implementation of SERIALIZABLE is rather bad and
causes serialization errors (ORA-08177) in unexpected situations, like
inserts into the table.
Using READ COMMITTED transactions works around this problem, but there
is a risk of inconsistencies. If you want to use it, check your
execution plans if the foreign scan could be executed more than once.
nchar (boolean, optional, defaults to off
)
Setting this option to on
chooses a more expensive character conversion
on the Oracle side. This is required if Oracle tables have NCHAR or
NVARCHAR2 columns that contain characters that cannot be represented in the
Oracle database character set.
Setting nchar
to on
has a noticable performance impact, and it causes
ORA-01461 errors with UPDATE statements that set strings over 2000 bytes
(or 16383 if you have MAX_STRING_SIZE = EXTENDED).
This error seems to be an Oracle bug.
set_timezone (boolean, optional, defaults to off
)
Setting this option to on
sets the Oracle session time zone to the current
value of the PostgreSQL parameter timezone
when the connection to Oracle
is made. This is only useful if you plan to use Oracle columns of type
TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE and want to translate them to timestamp without time zone
in PostgreSQL.
Note that if you change timezone
after the Oracle connection has been
established, oracle_fdw won't change the Oracle session time zone. You can
call oracle_close_connections()
in that case, so that a new connection is
opened the next time you access a foreign table.
If Oracle does not recognize the time zone, connections will fail with an error like
ORA-01882: timezone region not found
In that case, either use a different timezone
or leave the option set off
and set the environment variable ORA_SDTZ to an appropriate value in the
environment of the PostgreSQL server.
user (required)
The Oracle user name for the session.
Set this to an empty string for external authentication if you don't
want to store Oracle credentials in the PostgreSQL database (one simple way
is to use an external password store).
password (required)
The password for the Oracle user.
table (required)
The Oracle table name. This name must be written exactly as it occurs in Oracle's system catalog, so normally consist of uppercase letters only.
To define a foreign table based on an arbitrary Oracle query, set this option to the query enclosed in parentheses, e.g.
OPTIONS (table '(SELECT col FROM tab WHERE val = ''string'')')
Do not set the schema option in this case.
INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE will work on foreign tables defined on simple
queries; if you want to avoid that (or confusing Oracle error messages
for more complicated queries), use the table option readonly.
dblink (optional)
The Oracle database link through which the table is accessed. This name must be written exactly as it occurs in Oracle's system catalog, so normally consist of uppercase letters only.
schema (optional)
The table's schema (or owner). Useful to access tables that do not belong to the connecting Oracle user. This name must be written exactly as it occurs in Oracle's system catalog, so normally consist of uppercase letters only.
max_long (optional, defaults to "32767")
The maximal length of any LONG, LONG RAW and XMLTYPE columns in the Oracle
table. Possible values are integers between 1 and 1073741823 (the maximal
size of a bytea
in PostgreSQL). This amount of memory will be allocated
at least twice, so large values will consume a lot of memory.
If max_long is less than the length of the longest value retrieved,
you will receive the error message ORA-01406: fetched column value was truncated
.
readonly (optional, defaults to "false")
INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE is only allowed on tables where this option is not set to yes/on/true.
sample_percent (optional, defaults to "100")
This option only influences ANALYZE processing and can be useful to ANALYZE very large tables in a reasonable time.
The value must be between 0.000001 and 100 and defines the percentage of
Oracle table blocks that will be randomly selected to calculate PostgreSQL
table statistics. This is accomplished using the SAMPLE BLOCK (x)
clause in Oracle.
ANALYZE will fail with ORA-00933 for tables defined with Oracle queries and may fail with ORA-01446 for tables defined with complex Oracle views.
prefetch (optional, defaults to "50")
Sets the number of rows that will be fetched with a single round-trip between PostgreSQL and Oracle during a foreign table scan. The value must be between 1 and 10240.
Higher values can speed up performance, but will use more memory on the PostgreSQL server and can lead to out-of-memory errors there. High values usually won't offer any benefit unless the table rows are very small. Be careful with high values; you have been warned.
Note that there is no prefetching if the Oracle table contains columns of
the type MDSYS.SDO_GEOMETRY
.
lob_prefetch (optional, defaults to "1048576")
Sets the number of bytes that are prefetched for BLOB, CLOB and BFILE values. LOBs that exceed that size will require additional round trips between PostgreSQL and Oracle, so setting this value bigger than the size of your typical LOB will be good for performance. Choosing bigger values for this option can allocate more memory on the server side, but will boost performance for large LOBs.
key (optional, defaults to "false")
If set to yes/on/true, the corresponding column on the foreign Oracle table
is considered a primary key column.
For UPDATE and DELETE to work, you must set this option on all columns
that belong to the table's primary key.
strip_zeros (optional, defaults to "false")
If set to yes/on/true, ASCII 0 characters will be removed from the string
during transfer. Such characters are valid in Oracle but not in PostgreSQL,
so they will cause an error when read by oracle_fdw. This option only
make sense for character
, character varying
and text
columns.
The Oracle user will obviously need CREATE SESSION privilege and the right to select from the table or view in question. Note that oracle_fdw accesses the Oracle table at query planning time to get its definition. This happens before permissions on the foreign table are checked. Consequently, you may receive an Oracle error if you try to access a foreign table on which you have no permissions in PostgreSQL. This is expected and no security problem.
For EXPLAIN VERBOSE the user will also need SELECT privileges on V$SQL and V$SQL_PLAN.
oracle_fdw caches Oracle connections because it is expensive to create an Oracle session for each individual query. All connections are automatically closed when the PostgreSQL session ends.
The function oracle_close_connections()
can be used to close all cached
Oracle connections. This can be useful for long-running sessions that don't
access foreign tables all the time and want to avoid blocking the resources
needed by an open Oracle connection.
You cannot call this function inside a transaction that modifies Oracle data.
When you define a foreign table, the columns of the Oracle table are mapped to the PostgreSQL columns in the order of their definition.
oracle_fdw will only include those columns in the Oracle query that are actually needed by the PostgreSQL query.
The PostgreSQL table can have more or less columns than the Oracle table. If it has more columns, and these columns are used, you will receive a warning and NULL values will be returned.
If you want to UPDATE or DELETE, make sure that the key
option is set on all
columns that belong to the table's primary key. Failure to do so will result
in errors.
You must define the PostgreSQL columns with data types that oracle_fdw can translate (see the conversion table below). This restriction is only enforced if the column actually gets used, so you can define "dummy" columns for untranslatable data types as long as you don't access them (this trick only works with SELECT, not when modifying foreign data). If an Oracle value exceeds the size of the PostgreSQL column (e.g., the length of a varchar column or the maximal integer value), you will receive a runtime error.
These conversions are automatically handled by oracle_fdw:
Oracle type | Possible PostgreSQL types
-------------------------+--------------------------------------------------
CHAR | char, varchar, text
NCHAR | char, varchar, text
VARCHAR | char, varchar, text
VARCHAR2 | char, varchar, text, json
NVARCHAR2 | char, varchar, text
CLOB | char, varchar, text, json
LONG | char, varchar, text
RAW | uuid, bytea
BLOB | bytea
BFILE | bytea (read-only)
LONG RAW | bytea
NUMBER | numeric, float4, float8, char, varchar, text
NUMBER(n,m) with m<=0 | numeric, float4, float8, int2, int4, int8,
| boolean, char, varchar, text
FLOAT | numeric, float4, float8, char, varchar, text
BINARY_FLOAT | numeric, float4, float8, char, varchar, text
BINARY_DOUBLE | numeric, float4, float8, char, varchar, text
DATE | date, timestamp, timestamptz, char, varchar, text
TIMESTAMP | date, timestamp, timestamptz, char, varchar, text
TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE | date, timestamp, timestamptz, char, varchar, text
TIMESTAMP WITH | date, timestamp, timestamptz, char, varchar, text
LOCAL TIME ZONE |
INTERVAL YEAR TO MONTH | interval, char, varchar, text
INTERVAL DAY TO SECOND | interval, char, varchar, text
XMLTYPE | xml, char, varchar, text
MDSYS.SDO_GEOMETRY | geometry (see "PostGIS support" below)
If a NUMBER is converted to a boolean, 0 means false
, everything else true
.
Inserting or updating XMLTYPE only works with values that do not exceed the
maximum length of the VARCHAR2 data type (4000 or 32767, depending on the
MAX_STRING_SIZE
parameter).
NCLOB is currently not supported because Oracle cannot automatically convert it to the client encoding.
If you want to convert TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE to timestamp
, consider
setting the set_timezone
option on the foreign server.
If you need conversions exceeding the above, define an appropriate view in Oracle or PostgreSQL.
PostgreSQL will use all applicable parts of the WHERE clause as a filter for the scan. The Oracle query that oracle_fdw constructs will contain a WHERE clause corresponding to these filter criteria whenever such a condition can safely be translated to Oracle SQL. This feature, also known as push-down of WHERE clauses, can greatly reduce the number of rows retrieved from Oracle and may enable Oracle's optimizer to choose a good plan for accessing the required tables.
Similarly, ORDER BY clauses will be pushed down to Oracle wherever possible. Note that no ORDER BY condition that sorts by a character string will be pushed down as the sort orders in PostgreSQL and Oracle cannot be guaranteed to be the same.
To make use of that, try to use simple conditions for the foreign table. Choose PostgreSQL column data types that correspond to Oracle's types, because otherwise conditions cannot be translated.
The expressions now()
, transaction_timestamp()
, current_timestamp
,
current_date
and localtimestamp
will be translated correctly.
The output of EXPLAIN will show the Oracle query used, so you can see which conditions were translated to Oracle and how.
From PostgreSQL 9.6 on, oracle_fdw can push down joins to the Oracle server, that is, a join between two foreign tables will lead to a single Oracle query that performs the join on the Oracle side.
There are some restrictions when this can happen:
It is important that table statistics for both foreign tables have been collected with ANALYZE for PostgreSQL to determine the best join strategy.
oracle_fdw supports INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE on foreign tables. This is allowed by default (also in databases upgraded from an earlier PostgreSQL release) and can be disabled by setting the readonly table option.
For UPDATE and DELETE to work, the columns corresponding to the primary key columns of the Oracle table must have the key column option set. These columns are used to identify a foreign table row, so make sure that the option is set on all columns that belong to the primary key.
If you omit a foreign table column during INSERT, that column is set to the value defined in the DEFAULT clause on the PostgreSQL foreign table (or NULL if there is no DEFAULT clause). DEFAULT clauses on the corresponding Oracle columns are not used. If the PostgreSQL foreign table does not include all columns of the Oracle table, the Oracle DEFAULT clauses will be used for the columns not included in the foreign table definition.
The RETURNING clause on INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE is supported except for columns with Oracle data types LONG and LONG RAW (Oracle doesn't support these data types in the RETURNING clause).
Triggers on foreign tables are supported from PostgreSQL 9.4. Triggers defined with AFTER and FOR EACH ROW require that the foreign table has no columns with Oracle data type LONG or LONG RAW. This is because such triggers make use of the RETURNING clause mentioned above.
While modifying foreign data works, the performance is not particularly good, specifically when many rows are affected, because (owing to the way foreign data wrappers work) each row has to be treated individually.
Transactions are forwarded to Oracle, so BEGIN, COMMIT, ROLLBACK and SAVEPOINT work as expected. Prepared statements involving Oracle are not supported. See the Internals section for details.
Since oracle_fdw uses serialized transactions by default, it is possible that data modifying statements lead to a serialization failure:
ORA-08177: can't serialize access for this transaction
This can happen if concurrent transactions modify the table and gets more likely in long running transactions. Such errors can be identified by their SQLSTATE (40001). An application using oracle_fdw should retry transactions that fail with this error.
It is possible to use a different transaction isolation level, see Foreign server options for a discussion.
PostgreSQL's EXPLAIN will show the query that is actually issued to Oracle. EXPLAIN VERBOSE will show Oracle's execution plan (that will not work with Oracle server 9i or older, see Problems).
You can use ANALYZE to gather statistics on a foreign table. This is supported by oracle_fdw.
Without statistics, PostgreSQL has no way to estimate the row count for queries on a foreign table, which can cause bad execution plans to be chosen.
PostgreSQL will not automatically gather statistics for foreign tables with the autovacuum daemon like it does for normal tables, so it is particularly important to run ANALYZE on foreign tables after creation and whenever the remote table has changed significantly.
Keep in mind that analyzing an Oracle foreign table will result in a full sequential table scan. You can use the table option sample_percent to speed this up by using only a sample of the Oracle table.
The data type geometry
is only available when PostGIS is installed.
The only supported geometry types are POINT, LINE, POLYGON, MULTIPOINT, MULTILINE and MULTIPOLYGON in two and three dimensions. Empty PostGIS geometries are not supported because they have no equivalent in Oracle Spatial.
NULL values for Oracle SRID will be converted to 0 and vice versa.
For other conversions between Oracle SRID and PostGIS SRID, create a file
srid.map
in the PostgreSQL share
directory. Each line of this file
shall contain an Oracle SRID and the corresponding PostGIS SRID, separated
by whitespace. Keep the file small for good performance.
From PostgreSQL 9.5 on, IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA is supported to bulk import
table definitions for all tables in an Oracle schema.
In addition to the documentation of IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA, consider the
following:
IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA will create foreign tables for all objects found in ALL_TAB_COLUMNS. That includes tables, views and materialized views, but not synonyms.
These are the supported options for IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA:
The possible values are:
keep
: leave the names as they are in Oracle, usually in upper case.
lower
: translate all table and column names to lower case.
smart
: only translate names that are all upper case in Oracle
(this is the default).
collation: the collation used for case folding for the lower
and
smart
options of case
The default value is default
which is the database's default collation.
Only collations in the pg_catalog
schema are supported.
See the collname
values in the pg_collation
catalog for a list of
possible values.
This name must be written exactly as it occurs in Oracle's system catalog, so normally consist of uppercase letters only.
See the Options section for details.
skip_tables (default false
): don't import tables
skip_views (default false
): don't import views
skip_matviews (default false
): don't import materialized views
max_long: sets the max_long option on all imported tables
See the Options section for details.
See the Options section for details.
See the Options section for details.
See the Options section for details.
See the Options section for details.
See the Options section for details.
The Oracle schema name must be written exactly as it is in Oracle, so
normally in upper case. Since PostgreSQL translates names to lower case
before processing, you must protect the schema name with double quotes
(for example "SCOTT"
).
Table names in the LIMIT TO or EXCEPT clause must be written as they will appear in PostgreSQL after the case folding described above.
Note that IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA does not work with Oracle server 8i; see the Problems section for details.
oracle_fdw should compile and run on any platform supported by PostgreSQL and Oracle client, although I could only test it on Linux and Windows.
PostgreSQL 9.3 or better is required.
Due to API breaks in PostgreSQL minor releases, the following PostgreSQL versions cannot be used:
As always, you should be running the latest minor release for whatever PostgreSQL version you are using.
oracle_fdw is written for standard open source PostgreSQL. Forks of PostgreSQL, such as "PostgresPro" and "Postgres-XL", are likely to be incompatible. If you want to try it nonetheless, you'll have to build oracle_fdw from source. If you encounter problems while using such a PostgreSQL-derived server, please try with the original version before reporting an issue.
Oracle client version 11.2 or better is required. oracle_fdw can be built and used with Oracle Instant Client as well as with Oracle Client and Server installations installed with Universal Installer. Binaries compiled with Oracle Client 11 can be used with later client versions without recompilation or relink.
The supported Oracle server versions depend on the used client version (see the Oracle Client/Server Interoperability Matrix in Oracle Support document 207303.1). PostgreSQL and Oracle need to have the same architecture. For example, you cannot have 32-bit software for the one and 64-bit software for the other.
It is advisable to use the latest Patch Set on both Oracle client and server,
particularly with desupported Oracle versions.
For a list of Oracle bugs that are known to affect oracle_fdw's usability,
see the Problems section.
Consult the oracle_fdw Wiki (https://github.com/laurenz/oracle_fdw/wiki)
for tips about Oracle installation and configuration and share your own
knowledge there.
If you are using a binary distribution of oracle_fdw, skip to "Installing the extension" below. Additional hints for installing oracle_fdw can be found on the Wiki.
oracle_fdw has been written as a PostgreSQL extension and uses the Extension Building Infrastructure PGXS on all platforms except Windows. It should be easy to install. For building on Windows, see the next section.
You will need PostgreSQL headers and PGXS installed. If your PostgreSQL was installed with binary packages, install the "development" package. Make sure you have all operating system packages installed that were needed to build PostgreSQL (on Redhat-based systems, this may include "redhat-rpm-config").
You need to install Oracle's C header files as well (SDK package for Instant
Client). If you use the Instant Client ZIP files provided by Oracle,
you may have to create a symbolic link from libclntsh.so
to the actual shared
library file yourself (normally, the SDK package does that).
Make sure that PostgreSQL is configured --without-ldap
(at least the server).
See the Problems section.
Make sure that pg_config
is in the PATH (test with pg_config --pgxs
).
Set the environment variable ORACLE_HOME to the location of the Oracle
installation.
Unpack the source code of oracle_fdw and change into the directory.
Then the software installation should be as simple as:
$ make
$ make install
For the second step you need write permission on the directories where PostgreSQL is installed.
If you want to build oracle_fdw in a source tree of PostgreSQL, use
$ make NO_PGXS=1
To build oracle_fdw on Windows, you need:
To build, either open oracle_fdw\msvc\oracle_fdw.sln
in the IDE, or:
oracle_fdw\msvc
directory.Run (single command line):
msbuild oracle_fdw.sln /p:Configuration=(Debug or Release) ^ /p:Platform=(Win32 or x64) ^ /p:OracleClient=(path to Oracle Client/SDK) ^ /p:PostgreSQL=(path to PostgreSQL installation)
(The "^"s are line continuations; you can just put everything on a single line instead.)
When the build is complete, you will find oracle_fdw.dll
in a subdirectory
named for your build options, e.g. x64\Release
.
If you use Visual Studio 2015 or later and you get errors about missing
header files including sys/types.h
, you must install the Universal CRT
SDK (part of Visual Studio).
Copy oracle_fdw.dll
into the PostgreSQL library directory and copy
oracle_fdw.control
and the SQL files into the extension
subdirectory of
the PostgreSQL share directory.
To find those directories, you can use pg_config --libdir
and
pg_config --sharedir
.
Make sure that the oracle_fdw shared library is installed in the PostgreSQL
library directory and that oracle_fdw.control
and the SQL files are in
the PostgreSQL extension directory.
Since the Oracle client shared library is probably not in the standard
library path, you have to make sure that the PostgreSQL server will be able
to find it. How this is done varies from operating system to operating
system; on Linux you can set LD_LIBRARY_PATH or use /etc/ld.so.conf
.
Make sure that all necessary Oracle environment variables are set in the environment of the PostgreSQL server process (ORACLE_HOME if you don't use Instant Client, TNS_ADMIN if you have configuration files, etc.)
To install the extension in a database, connect as superuser and
CREATE EXTENSION oracle_fdw;
That will define the required functions and create a foreign data wrapper.
To upgrade from an oracle_fdw version before 1.0.0, use
ALTER EXTENSION oracle_fdw UPDATE;
Note that the extension version as shown by the psql command \dx
or the
system catalog pg_available_extensions
is not the installed version
of oracle_fdw. To get the oracle_fdw version, use the function oracle_diag
.
Unless you are developing oracle_fdw or want to test its functionality on an exotic platform, you don't have to do this.
For the regression tests to work, you must have a PostgreSQL cluster
and an Oracle server (10.2 or better with Locator or Spatial) running,
and the oracle_fdw binaries must be installed.
The regression tests will create a database called contrib_regression
and
run a number of tests. For the PostGIS regression tests to succeed,
the PostGIS binaries must be installed.
The Oracle database must be prepared as follows:
scott
with password tiger
must exist (unless you want to edit
the regression test scripts). The user needs CREATE SESSION, CREATE TABLE,
CREATE VIEW and CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW system privileges and enough quota
on its default tablespace, as well as SELECT privileges on V$SQL and
V$SQL_PLAN.Set the environment for the PostgreSQL server so that it can establish an Oracle connection without connect string: If the Oracle server is on the same machine, set the environment variables ORACLE_SID and ORACLE_HOME appropriately, for a remote server set the environment variable TWO_TASK (or LOCAL on Windows) to the connect string.
The regression tests are run as follows:
$ make installcheck
The regression tests are kept up to date with the latest development version of PostgreSQL. If you run them with older PostgreSQL versions, you can expect minor differences, like changed error messages or a different format of the psql output.
oracle_fdw sets the MODULE of the Oracle session to postgres
and the
ACTION to the backend process number. This can help identifying the Oracle
session and allows you to trace it with DBMS_MONITOR.SERV_MOD_ACT_TRACE_ENABLE.
oracle_fdw uses Oracle's array interface to avoid unnecessary client-server round-trips. The batch size can be configured with the prefetch table option and is set to 50 by default.
Rather than using a PLAN_TABLE to explain an Oracle query (which would require such a table to be created in the Oracle database), oracle_fdw uses execution plans stored in the library cache. For that, an Oracle query is explicitly described, which forces Oracle to parse the query. The hard part is to find the SQL_ID and CHILD_NUMBER of the statement in V$SQL because the SQL_TEXT column contains only the first 1000 bytes of the query. Therefore, oracle_fdw adds a comment to the query that contains a hash of the query text. This is used to search in V$SQL. The actual execution plan or cost information is retrieved from V$SQL_PLAN.
oracle_fdw uses transaction isolation level SERIALIZABLE on the Oracle side,
which corresponds to PostgreSQL's REPEATABLE READ. This is necessary because
a single PostgreSQL statement can lead to multiple Oracle queries (e.g. during
a nested loop join) and the results need to be consistent.
Unfortunately the Oracle implementation of SERIALIZABLE has certain quirks;
see the Problems section for more.
The Oracle transaction is committed immediately before the local transaction
commits, so that a completed PostgreSQL transaction guarantees that the Oracle
transaction has completed. However, there is a small chance that the
PostgreSQL transaction cannot complete even though the Oracle transaction
is committed. This cannot be avoided without using two-phase transactions
and a transaction manager, which is beyond what a foreign data wrapper
can reasonably provide.
Prepared statements involving Oracle are not supported for the same reason.
Characters stored in an Oracle database that cannot be converted to the PostgreSQL database encoding will silently be replaced by replacement characters, typically a normal or inverted question mark, by Oracle. You will get no warning or error messages.
If you use a PostgreSQL database encoding that Oracle does not know (currently, these are EUC_CN, EUC_KR, LATIN10, MULE_INTERNAL, WIN874 and SQL_ASCII), non-ASCII characters cannot be translated correctly. You will get a warning in this case, and the characters will be replaced by replacement characters as described above.
You can set the nls_lang option of the foreign data wrapper to force a certain Oracle encoding, but the resulting characters will most likely be incorrect and lead to PostgreSQL error messages. This is probably only useful for SQL_ASCII encoding if you know what you are doing. See the Options section.
The definition of the Oracle system catalogs V$SQL and V$SQL_PLAN has changed with Oracle 10.1. Using EXPLAIN VERBOSE with older Oracle server versions will result in errors like:
ERROR: error describing query: OCIStmtExecute failed to execute remote query for sql_id DETAIL: ORA-00904: "LAST_ACTIVE_TIME": invalid identifier
There is no plan to fix this, since Oracle 9i has been out of Extended Support since 2010 and the functionality is not essential.
IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA throws the following error with Oracle server 8i:
ERROR: error importing foreign schema: OCIStmtExecute failed to execute column query DETAIL: ORA-00904: invalid column name
This is because the view ALL_TAB_COLUMNS lacks the column CHAR_LENGTH, which was added in Oracle 9i.
The Oracle client shared library comes with its own LDAP client
implementation conforming to RFC 1823,
so these functions have the same names as OpenLDAP's. This will lead to a
name collision when the PostgreSQL server was configured --with-ldap
.
The name collision will not be detected, because oracle_fdw is loaded at runtime, but trouble will happen if anybody calls an LDAP function. Typically, OpenLDAP is loaded first, so if Oracle calls an LDAP function (for example if you use directory naming name resolution), the backend will crash. This can lead to messages like the following (seen on Linux) in the PostgreSQL server log:
../../../libraries/libldap/getentry.c:29: ldap_first_entry:
Assertion `( (ld)->ld_options.ldo_valid == 0x2 )' failed.
The best thing is to configure PostgreSQL --without-ldap
. This is the only
safe way to avoid this problem.
Even when PostgreSQL is built --with-ldap
, it may work as long as you don't
use any LDAP client functionality in Oracle.
On some platforms, you can force Oracle's client shared library to be loaded
before the PostgreSQL server is started (LD_PRELOAD on Linux). Then Oracle's
LDAP functions should get used. In that case, Oracle may be able to use
LDAP functionality, but using LDAP from PostgreSQL will crash the backend.
You cannot use LDAP functionality both in PostgreSQL and in Oracle, period.
In Oracle 11.2 or above, inserting the first row into a newly created Oracle table with oracle_fdw will lead to a serialization error.
This is because of an Oracle feature called deferred segment creation which defers allocation of storage space for a new table until the first row is inserted. This causes a serialization failure with serializable transactions (see document 1285464.1 in Oracle's knowledge base).
This is no serious problem; you can work around it by either ignoring that first error or creating the table with SEGMENT CREATION IMMEDIATE.
A much nastier problem is that concurrent inserts can sometimes cause serialization errors when an index page is split concurrently with a modifying serializable transaction (see Oracle document 160593.1).
Oracle claims that this is not a bug, and the suggested solution is to retry the transaction that got a serialization error.
This is a list of Oracle bugs that affect or have affected oracle_fdw.
Bug 2728408 can cause ORA-8177 cannot serialize access for this transaction
even if no modification of remote data is attempted.
It can occur with Oracle server 8.1.7.4 (install one-off patch 2728408) or
Oracle server 9.2 (install Patch Set 9.2.0.4 or better).
Oracle client 21c is known not to work for CLOB columns (they appear empty). There is no ultimate proof that that is an Oracle bug, but other versions are working fine.
The following error message (from any query involving an Oracle foreign table) indicates that PostgreSQL cannot find the Oracle client library:
ERROR: Oracle client library (oci.dll) not found
DETAIL: No Oracle client is installed, or your system is configured incorrectly.
HINT: Verify that the PATH variable includes the Oracle client.
Make sure that the path to oci.dll
is in the PATH environment variable of
the user running the PostgreSQL server. If it is running as a Windows service,
this is the system environment, and you must restart the service after
changing it.
If updating the environment does not work, you may be using a PostgreSQL distribution that provides its own environment variables, hiding the Oracle client. See the bug report at https://github.com/laurenz/oracle_fdw/issues/160 for more information.
Check out the Wiki for help with configuration on certain platforms and other problems. Also, searching the GitHub issues can help - you may not be the first one with that problem.
If you want to report a problem with oracle_fdw, and the name of the foreign server is (for example) "ora_serv", please include the output of
SELECT oracle_diag('ora_serv');
in your problem report. If that causes an error, please also include the output of
SELECT oracle_diag();
If you have a problem or question or any kind of feedback, the preferred
option is to open an issue on GitHub:
https://github.com/laurenz/oracle_fdw/issues
This requires a GitHub account.
Commercial support is available from [CYBERTEC PostgreSQL International GmbH][https://www.cybertec-postgresql.com].