This helps us test the sharding algorithm we implemented.
We setup 3 Postgres DBs, shard0
, shard1
, and shard2
. In each database, we create a partitioned table called data
. The table is partitioned by hash, and each database will only have one partition, shard0
will satisfy modulus 3, remainder 0
, shard1
will satisfy modulus 3, remainder 1
, etc.
To set this up, you can just run:
psql -f query_routing_setup.sql
Start up PgCat by running cargo run --release
in the root of the repo. In a different tab, run this:
psql -h 127.0.0.1 -p 6432 -f query_routing_test_insert.sql
psql -h 127.0.0.1 -p 6432 -f query_routing_test_select.sql
Note that no errors should take place. If our sharding logic was incorrect, we would get some errors about unsatisfiable partition bounds. We don't because the pooler picked the correct databases given the sharding keys.
Finally, you can validate the result again by running
psql -f query_routing_test_validate.sql