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Bucardo Odoo Replication

This repository is an experiment to replicate Odoo in multi-branches super market (using Odoo PoS) with Bucardo (Multi-master replication).

What's the use case of odoo replication?

The use case is pretty simple, we have a main server (Odoo & PostgreSQL) installed in the main datacenter of the company, and we have branches all over the world that work on the PoS module but they don't have a stable connection to the main server all the time (connection may go away for several days) so we need to install Odoo & PostgreSQL servers for each branch to be able to continue working without interruptions and then sync back to the master Odoo & PostgreSQL servers automatically when the connection gets back online.

How to use this repo?

To bring the cluster/stack up, just execute the script:

$ ./setup.sh

which will build the needed docker images and deploy them according to the docker-compose.yml file. you need to have docker and docker-compose in your $PATH before executing this shell script.

The script will also create a testing database with PoS module on it with demo data, and replicate it to 2 branches with pg_basebackup and then kicks the bucardo replication.

How to test?

Start by testing something basic like adding, deleting, and modifying a bunch of users on different instances (main, branch1, branch2) and observe the sync on the other instances.

Then, create new Point of Sales for the branches in the Point of Sale app. Notice that Bucardo doesn't replicate DDL on its own, so the newly created PostgreSQL sequences should be replicated and added to bucardo manually first. We need to stop the branches instances, then replicate the database again with pg_basebackup and add the new sequences to bucardo, then restart it again.

$ docker-compose stop branch1_db branch2_db
$ docker-compose run --rm --entry-point='/bin/bash -c' --user=postgres \
    branch1_db "rm -rf /var/lib/postgresql/data/*; \
                PGPASSWORD=replica pg_basebackup -h master_db -U \
                replica -D /var/lib/postgresql/data -P --xlog"
$ docker-compose start branch1_db branch2_db
$ docker-compose exec master_bucardo bucardo add all sequences master_db \
    --herd=odoo
$ docker-compose exec master_bucardo bucardo restart
$ docker-compose exec master_bucardo bucardo status # check status
$ docker-compose exec master_bucardo bucardo list dbs # check db statuses
$ docker-compose exec master_bucardo bucardo list syncs # check sync statuses

After that, start a session for each branch on a different PoS (preferably with different users) and start selling, and see the orders being created on the PoS of each intance.

you can then disconnect one of these servers from the network (to see what happens when it gets back online) or you can just stop the bucardo instance altogether, to stop the replication from happening (either way, it's the same result).

$ docker-compose stop master_bucardo
# go do some PoS orders on different instances, then get back to restart it
$ docker-compose start master_bucardo

What's the end result of this experiment?

Odoo is not designed with multi-master replication or being a distributed system in mind. It's - at the end of the day - an ancient typical monolithic web application. So, you'll notice that problems with sequences will arise (Bucardo for some reason doesn't synchronize them fast as the tables, or Odoo maybe caches them somehow) as you'll get some unique primary key violations because the PostgreSQL sequence gave you the same number the other instance gave to the previous record.

Also, bucardo (with all of its conflict resolution strategies) will throw data of one of the instances if they used the same primary key (say you have created a user with ID 10 on branch1 and created a user with ID 10 on branch2 while they're being disconnected from network, when they get back online and bucardo starts to replicate them, it'll take one of the users and throw the other one!!).

Add to that Bucardo doesn't discover DDL alterations or replicate it, so upon any module installation, upgrade, or removal, and also PoS (or any sequence-altering models) will need to be replicated manually (take down the branches instances, replicate the master database, add the tables/sequences to bucardo, and restart the branches instances and bucardo server).

Some of these problems can be solved using BDR (Bi-Directional Replication) from 2ndQuadrant (Especially, the DDL replication thing), but modifications to Odoo source code should be made to accept such replication (using UUIDs or Global Sequences for primary keys instead of normal integer sequences will be one step forward for example).

What's other options for the setup.sh script?

You can pass BUILD=true to re-build images (if there's new changes on them), and you can pass DESTROY=true to remove the old instances and start from scratch. Also, the script can be debugged by passing the variable DEBUG=true to see the executed commands alongside their output.

$ DEBUG=true BUILD=true DESTROY=true ./setup.sh

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Multi-Master Replication Experiment On Odoo Using Bucardo

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