Learn how Stitch will load data from your integrations into Stitch’s PostgreSQL destination.

In this guide, we’ll cover data loading scenarios involving:


Applicable destination types

This guide is applicable to the all variations of the PostgreSQL destination, including:


Primary Key scenarios

Scenarios involving Primary Key columns.

IF

A table without a Primary Key is replicated.

THEN
  • Initial job: Table is created without Primary Key and NOT NULL constraints.
  • Subsequent jobs: If using Key-based Incremental or Log-based Incremental Replication, data will be added to the table in an Append-Only fashion.

    If using Full Table Replication, the table will be overwritten in its entirety during each job.

IF

A table with a single Primary Key is replicated.

THEN
  • Initial job: Table is created with Primary Key constraint (table_name_pkey). Primary Key column has NOT NULL constraint.
  • Subsequent jobs: If using Key-based Incremental or Log-based Incremental Replication, data will be de-duped based on the Primary Key column and upserted into the table.

    If using Full Table Replication, the table will be overwritten in its entirety during each job.

IF

A table with multiple Primary Keys is replicated.

THEN
  • Initial job: Table is created with Primary Key constraint (table_name_pkey). Primary Key columns have NOT NULL constraint.
  • Subsequent jobs: If using Key-based Incremental or Log-based Incremental Replication, data will be de-duped based on the Primary Key column and upserted into the table.

    If using Full Table Replication, the table will be overwritten in its entirety during each job.

IF

The table’s Primary Key(s) is/are changed.

THEN

If using Key-based Incremental or Log-based Incremental Replication, data will be added to the table in an Append-Only fashion.

If using Full Table Replication, the table will be overwritten in its entirety during each job.

IF

You remove the Primary Key column(s) for a table in PostgreSQL.

THEN

Data will be loaded into the table in an Append-Only fashion.

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Replication Key scenarios

Scenarios involving Replication Keys and how data is loaded as a result.

IF

A table using Key-based Incremental Replication is replicated where the Replication Key column contains NULL values.

THEN
  • During the initial job, the table will be created and all rows will be replicated.
  • During subsequent jobs, only rows with populated Replication Keys will be replicated and persisted to PostgreSQL.

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Object naming scenarios

Scenarios involving object identifiers in the destination, including naming limitations and transformations.

IF

A table name contains more characters than allowed by PostgreSQL.

THEN

PostgreSQL will reject all data for the table.

AND

The following error will display in the Notifications tab in Stitch:

Table name [TABLE] is too long for PostgreSQL

Rejected records will be logged in the _sdc_rejected table of the integration's schema. Learn more.

FIX IT

If possible, change the table name in the source to be less than PostgreSQL’s character limit of 63 characters.

Use the _sdc_rejected table to identify the root of the issue.

IF

A column name contains more characters than allowed by PostgreSQL.

THEN

PostgreSQL will reject columns with names that exceed the column character limit. Other columns in the table will persist to PostgreSQL.

AND

The following error will display in the Notifications tab in Stitch:

Column name [COLUMN] is too long for PostgreSQL

Rejected records will be logged in the _sdc_rejected table of the integration's schema. Learn more.

FIX IT

If possible, change the column name in the source to be less than PostgreSQL’s character limit of 59 characters.

Use the _sdc_rejected table to identify the root of the issue.

IF

Two columns are replicated that canonicalize to the same name.

THEN

For example: A table containing both CustomerId and customerid columns.

PostgreSQL will reject the records and create a log for the rejected records in the _sdc_rejected table in that integration’s schema.

AND

The following error will display in the Notifications tab in Stitch:

Field collision on [COLUMN_NAME]

Rejected records will be logged in the _sdc_rejected table of the integration's schema. Learn more.

FIX IT

If possible, re-name one of the columns in the source so that both column names will be unique when replicated to PostgreSQL.

Use the _sdc_rejected table to identify the root of the issue.

IF

A column is replicated that has a mixed-case name.

THEN

PostgreSQL will maintain the case. For example:

Columns in Source Columns in PostgreSQL
CuStOmErId CuStOmErId
customerID customerID
IF

A column is replicated that has a name with spaces.

THEN

PostgreSQL will maintain the spaces. For example:

Columns in Source Columns in PostgreSQL
customer id customer id
CUSTOMER ID CUSTOMER ID
IF

A column is replicated with a name that contains unsupported special characters.

THEN

PostgreSQL will remove the unsupported characters. For example:

Columns in Source   Columns in PostgreSQL
!customerid   customerid
customer!id   customerid
CUSTOMER! ID   CUSTOMER ID
IF

A column is replicated with a name that begins with a non-letter.

THEN

PostgreSQL will remove all leading non-letter characters with the exception of leading underscores. For example:

Columns in Source   Columns in PostgreSQL
123customerid   customerid
_customerid   _customerid
_987CUSTOMERID   _987CUSTOMERID

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Table scenarios

Scenarios involving table creation and modification in the destination.

IF

A table contains entirely NULL columns.

THEN

No table is created in PostgreSQL. At least one column must have a non-NULL value for Stitch to create a table in PostgreSQL.

IF

A table arrives with more columns than PostgreSQL allows.

THEN

PostgreSQL will reject all data for the table.

AND

The following error will display in the Notifications tab in Stitch:

ERROR: too many columns

Rejected records will be logged in the _sdc_rejected table of the integration's schema. Learn more.

FIX IT

If possible, deselect some columns to allow Stitch to load data into PostgreSQL for the table. PostgreSQL has a limit of 250-1,600 columns per table.

Use the _sdc_rejected table to identify the root of the issue.

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Data typing scenarios

Scenarios involving various data types, including how data is typed and structured in the destination.

IF

Stitch detects multiple data types for a single column.

THEN

To accommodate data of varying types, Stitch will create multiple columns to ensure data is loaded with the correct type. In the destination, this will look like the column has been “split”.

For example: Stitch first detected that order_confirmed contained BOOLEAN data, but during a subsequent job, detected STRING values. To accommodate data of varying types, Stitch will:

  1. Re-name the original column. The new name will be the column name and a suffix indicating the data type Stitch detected first. In this example, the new column name would be order_confirmed__bl, __bl indicating BOOLEAN.

  2. Store data for the first-detected data type in the re-named column. In this example, all BOOLEAN data will be stored in order_confirmed__bl.

  3. Create additional columns to store other data types, one for each data type detected. Suffixes indicating the data type will be appended to the column names. In this example, STRING data will be stored in order_confirmed__st.

IF

Data is replicated to PostgreSQL that is nested, containing many top-level properties and potentially nested sub-properties.

THEN

To ensure nested data can be loaded, Stitch will flatten objects and arrays into columns and subtables, respectively.

For more info and examples, refer to the Handling nested data structures guide.

IF

A VARCHAR column is replicated to PostgreSQL.

THEN

Stitch will store all VARCHAR/TEXT data as TEXT.

IF

VARCHAR data is loaded that exceeds the current maximum size for the column.

THEN

No widening will occur, as PostgreSQL stores VARCHAR/TEXT data as TEXT, which can store strings with unlimited lengths.

IF

A column containing date data with timezone info is replicated to PostgreSQL.

THEN

PostgreSQL will store the value in UTC as TIMESTAMP WITHOUT TIMEZONE.

IF

A column contains timestamp data that is outside PostgreSQL’s supported range.

THEN

PostgreSQL will reject the records that fall outside the supported range.

AND

The following error will display in the Notifications tab in Stitch:

timestamp out of range for PostgreSQL on [TIMESTAMP]

Rejected records will be logged in the _sdc_rejected table of the integration's schema. Learn more.

FIX IT

To resolve the error, offending values in the source must be changed to be within PostgreSQL’s timestamp range.

Use the _sdc_rejected table to identify the root of the issue.

IF

A column contains integer data that is outside PostgreSQL’s supported range.

THEN

PostgreSQL will reject the records that fall outside the supported range.

AND

The following error will display in the Notifications tab in Stitch:

integer out of range for PostgreSQL on [INTEGER]

Rejected records will be logged in the _sdc_rejected table of the integration's schema. Learn more.

FIX IT

To resolve the error, offending values in the source must be changed to be within PostgreSQL’s limit for integers.

Use the _sdc_rejected table to identify the root of the issue.

IF

A column contains decimal data that is outside PostgreSQL’s supported range.

THEN

PostgreSQL will reject the records that fall outside the supported range.

AND

The following error will display in the Notifications tab in Stitch:

decimal out of range for PostgreSQL on [DECIMAL]

Rejected records will be logged in the _sdc_rejected table of the integration's schema. Learn more.

FIX IT

To resolve the error, offending values in the source must be changed to be within PostgreSQL’s limit for decimals.

Use the _sdc_rejected table to identify the root of the issue.

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Schema change scenarios

Scenarios involving schema changes in the source or structural changes in the destination.

IF

A new column is added in table already set to replicate.

THEN

If the column has at least one non-NULL value in the source, the column will be created and appended to the end of the table in PostgreSQL.

Note: If the table using either Key- or Log-based Incremental Replication, backfilled values for the column will only be replicated if:

  1. The records’ Replication Key values are greater than or equal to the last saved maximum Replication Key value for the table, or
  2. The table is reset and a historical re-replication is queued.
IF

A new column is added by you to a Stitch-generated table in PostgreSQL.

THEN

Columns may be added to tables created by Stitch as long as they are nullable, meaning columns don’t have NOT NULL constraints.

IF

A column is deleted at the source.

THEN

How a deleted column is reflected in PostgreSQL depends on the Replication Method used by the table:

  • Key-based Incremental: The column will remain in the destination, and default NULL values will be placed in it going forward.

  • Log-based Incremental: Changes to a source table - including adding or removing columns, changing data types, etc. - require manual intervention before replication can continue. Refer to the Log-based Incremental Replication documentation for more info.

  • Full Table: The column will remain in the destination, and default NULL values will be placed in it going forward.

IF

You remove a column from a Stitch-replicated table in your destination.

THEN

The result of deleting a column from a Stitch-generated table depends on the type of column being removed:

  • Primary Key columns: Changing a table’s Primary Key(s) is not permitted in PostgreSQL. If Primary Key columns are changed, Stitch will stop processing data for the table.

  • General columns: If new data is detected for the removed column, Stitch will re-create it in PostgreSQL. This refers to all columns that are not prepended by _sdc or suffixed by a data type. For example: customer_zip, but not customer_zip__st.

    Note: An integration must support selecting columns AND you must deselect the column in Stitch for the column removal to be permanent.

  • _sdc columns: Removing a Stitch replication column will prevent Stitch from loading replicated data into PostgreSQL.

  • Columns with data type suffixes: Removing a column created as result of accommodating multiple data types will prevent Stitch from loading replicated data into the table. This applies to columns with names such as: customer_zip__st, customer_zip__int, etc.

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Destination changes

Scenarios involving modifications made to the destination, such as the application of workload/performance management features or user privilege changes.

IF

Indices are applied to Stitch-generated columns in the destination.

THEN

Stitch will respect the index application.

IF

You switch to a different destination of the same type.

THEN

This means the destination type is still PostgreSQL, Stitch may just be connected a different database in PostgreSQL.

  • For tables using Key-based or Log-based Incremental Replication, replication will continue using the Replication’s Key last saved maximum value. To re-replicate historical data, resetting Replication Keys is required.
  • For tables using Full Table Replication, the table will be fully replicated into the new destination during the next successful job.
  • For webhook integrations, some data loss may be possible due to the continuous, real-time nature of webhooks. Historical data must either be backfilled or re-played.

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