Troubleshoot migration errors
The migration job process might incur errors during runtime.
- Some errors, such as a bad password on the source database, are recoverable, meaning they can be fixed and the migration job resumes automatically.
- Some are unrecoverable, such as errors in data replication, meaning the migration job needs to be restarted from the beginning.
When an error occurs, the migration job status changes to Failed
, and the substatus reflects the last status before failure.
To troubleshoot an error, navigate to the failed migration job to view the error and follow the steps outlined in the error message.
To view more details about the error, navigate to Cloud Monitoring using the link on the migration job. The logs are filtered to the specific migration job.
In the following table, you can find some examples of issues and how they can be solved:
Symptom | Possible causes | Things to try |
---|---|---|
Failure connecting to the source database instance. | There was a connectivity issue between the source database instance and the destination instance. | Follow the steps in Debugging connectivity. |
Failure running migration job due to incompatible source and destination database versions. | The source and destination database versions aren't a supported combination. Specifically, the source database version provided is incompatible with the destination database version. | Make sure that the destination database version is the same or one major version above the source database version. Then, create a new migration job. |
Data definition languages (DDLs) or data manipulation languages (DMLs) are blocked on the source. | DDLs that require the ACCESS EXCLUSIVE lock and are running during the full dump phase are blocked. |
During the initial sync process (full dump), DDLs or programs requiring For example, if a table is still in the initial sync process and an |
Error Message: No pglogical extension installed on databases (X)
|
One or more source databases doesn't have pglogical installed. |
Follow these guidelines to install pglogical on the databases on the source instance. |
Error Message: Replication user 'x' doesn't have sufficient privileges.
|
The user who's using Database Migration Service doesn't have the required privileges to perform the designated operation. | Follow these guidelines to ensure that this user has the required privileges. |
Error Message: Unable to connect to source database server.
|
Database Migration Service can't establish a connection to the source database server. | Make sure that the source and destination database instances can communicate with each other, and that you've completed all of the required prerequisites that appeared when you defined your settings for the migration job. |
Error Message: The source database 'wal_level' configuration must be equal to 'logical'.
|
The wal_level for the source database is set to a value other than logical . |
Set the wal_level to logical . |
Error Message: The source database 'max_replication_slots' configuration is not sufficient.
|
The max_replication_slots parameter wasn't configured correctly. |
Follow these guidelines to set this parameter correctly. |
Error Message: The source database 'max_wal_senders' configuration is not sufficient.
|
The max_wal_senders parameter wasn't configured correctly. |
Follow these guidelines to set this parameter correctly. |
Error Message: The source database 'max_worker_processes' configuration is not sufficient.
|
The max_worker_processes parameter wasn't configured correctly. |
Follow these guidelines to set this parameter correctly. |
Error Message: OR
Error Message: |
The settings needed for replication can't be cleaned up during the promotion of a migration job. | For each database, run commands as a user with the For more information about which commands to run, see Clean up replication slots. |
Error Message: |
The source CA certificate provided to Database Migration Service might contain only the root certificate. However, the source certificate requires both the root certificate and any intermediate certificates. For example, for Amazon Relational Database Service, using the rds-ca-2019-root.pem certificate might result in this issue. |
Create a combined source CA certificate that contains both the root certificate and all required intermediate certificates. For the Amazon Relational Database Service use case, instead of the rds-ca-2019-root.pem certificate, use the rds-combined-ca-bundle.pem certificate. |
Error Message: |
The value set for the max_locks_per_transaction parameter isn't sufficient. |
Set the value for this parameter to be at least {max_number_of_tables_per_database }/(max_connections + max_prepared_transactions ). |
Error Message: |
The pglogical package isn't installed correctly on the source instance. | For more information on how to install this package properly, see Install the pglogical package on the source instance. |
Error Message: |
The source that's configured is in recovery mode. | Configure a source that isn't in recovery mode. |
The full dump is slow. | The AlloyDB destination might be slow in importing large data from the source database. |
|
Error Message: subscriber {subscriber_name} initialization failed during nonrecoverable step (d), please try the setup again |
The migration job failed during the full dump phase and the job isn't recoverable. The source database instance was restarted or in recovery mode, or the replication connections ended because of an insufficient value set for the To find the root cause of the problem:
|
|
Error Message: ERROR: unknown column name {column_name} |
A column was added to a replicated table on the primary node but not on the replica node. |
Only data manipulation language (DML) changes are updated automatically during continuous migrations. Managing data definition language (DDL) changes so that the source and destination databases remain compatible is the responsibility of the user, and can be achieved in two ways:
See Continuous migration to find the examples of using the |
Error Message: ERROR: cannot truncate a table referenced in a foreign key constraint |
The user tried to truncate a table that has a foreign key constraint. |
Remove the foreign key constraint first, and then truncate the table. |
Error Message: ERROR: connection to other side has died |
The replication connection ended because of an insufficient value set for the |
Consider increasing the |
Clean up replication slots
You see one of the following messages:
Cleanup may have failed on source due to error: generic::unknown: failed to connect to on-premises database.
Error promoting EM replica: finished drop replication with errors.
Possible causes
When promoting a AlloyDB instance, if the source instance isn't reachable from the AlloyDB instance (for example, the source instance isn't running, or you removed the AlloyDB instance from the allow list of source instances), then the settings needed for the replication can't be cleaned up during the promotion of a migration job. You must clean up the replication slots manually.
Things to try
For each database, run the following commands as a user with the superuser
privilege:
Get the replication slot names from the error message, and then run the following command to drop the slots, one by one:
select pg_drop_replication_slot({slot_name});
-
If the replication slot names aren't available in the error message, then run the following command to query for the existing replication slots:
select pg_drop_replication_slot(slot_name) from pg_replication_slots where slot_name like '%alloydb%' and active = 'f';
-
If there are no AlloyDB replicas using the source instance, then run the following command to clean up
pglogical
settings:select pglogical.drop_node(node_name) from pglogical.node where node_name like
'alloydb';
-
If the
pglogical
extension isn't needed anymore, then run the following command to uninstall the extension:DROP EXTENSION IF EXISTS pglogical;
Delete orphaned AlloyDB clusters in bootstrapping mode
In rare edge cases, you might find that your migration job has been deleted, while the associated AlloyDB cluster hasn't, and is still in the bootstrapping mode. It is possible to delete the cluster using AlloyDB's gcloud command for deleting a cluster, combined with the --force
option.
Note that deleting a bootstrapping cluster while it's being used by a migration job results in undefined behavior.
Manage users and roles
Migrate existing users
Currently, Database Migration Service doesn't support migrating existing users from a source instance into a destination AlloyDB instance. You can manage this migration by creating the users in AlloyDB manually.
About the alloydbexternalsync
user
During the migration, all objects on the AlloyDB primary are owned by the alloydbexternalsync
user. After the data is migrated, you can modify the ownership of the objects to other users by completing the following steps:
- Run the
GRANT alloydbexternalsync to {USER}
command. - On each database, run the
reassign owned by alloydbexternalsync to {USER};
command. - To remove the
alloydbexternalsync
user, run thedrop role alloydbexternalsync
command.