18.15. Error Handling
exit_on_error
(boolean
)If on, any error will terminate the current session. By default, this is set to off, so that only FATAL errors will terminate the session.
restart_after_crash
(boolean
)When set to on, which is the default, Postgres Pro will automatically reinitialize after a backend crash. Leaving this value set to on is normally the best way to maximize the availability of the database. However, in some circumstances, such as when Postgres Pro is being invoked by clusterware, it may be useful to disable the restart so that the clusterware can gain control and take any actions it deems appropriate.
This parameter can only be set in the
postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.data_sync_retry
(boolean
)When set to off, which is the default, Postgres Pro will raise a PANIC-level error on failure to flush modified data files to the file system. This causes the database server to crash. This parameter can only be set at server start.
On some operating systems, the status of data in the kernel's page cache is unknown after a write-back failure. In some cases it might have been entirely forgotten, making it unsafe to retry; the second attempt may be reported as successful, when in fact the data has been lost. In these circumstances, the only way to avoid data loss is to recover from the WAL after any failure is reported, preferably after investigating the root cause of the failure and replacing any faulty hardware.
If set to on, Postgres Pro will instead report an error but continue to run so that the data flushing operation can be retried in a later checkpoint. Only set it to on after investigating the operating system's treatment of buffered data in case of write-back failure.
recovery_init_sync_method
(enum
)When set to
fsync
, which is the default, Postgres Pro will recursively open and synchronize all files in the data directory before crash recovery begins. The search for files will follow symbolic links for the WAL directory and each configured tablespace (but not any other symbolic links). This is intended to make sure that all WAL and data files are durably stored on disk before replaying changes. This applies whenever starting a database cluster that did not shut down cleanly, including copies created with pg_basebackup.On Linux,
syncfs
may be used instead, to ask the operating system to synchronize the whole file systems that contain the data directory, the WAL files and each tablespace (but not any other file systems that may be reachable through symbolic links). This may be a lot faster than thefsync
setting, because it doesn't need to open each file one by one. On the other hand, it may be slower if a file system is shared by other applications that modify a lot of files, since those files will also be written to disk. Furthermore, on versions of Linux before 5.8, I/O errors encountered while writing data to disk may not be reported to Postgres Pro, and relevant error messages may appear only in kernel logs.This parameter can only be set in the
postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.crash_info
(boolean
)When set to
on
, which is the default, Postgres Pro will write diagnostic information about a backend crash into a file.This parameter can only be set at server start.
crash_info_dump
(text
)Specifies a comma-separated list of character strings that contain data sources to provide data for a crash dump. Possible values of the strings are as follows:
queries
— query textsmemory_context
— memory contextsystem
— information on the OSmodule
— information on modules loaded to thepostgres
processcpuinfo
— information on the processorvirtual_memory
— information on virtual memory regions
The default value is
system,module,queries,memory_context
.This parameter can only be set at server start.
crash_info_location
(string
)Specifies the directory where information about a backend crash is to be stored. The value of
stderr
sends information about the crash to stderr. If this parameter is set to the empty string''
, which is the default, the$PGDATA/crash_info
directory is used. If you wish to keep the files elsewhere, create the target directory in advance and grant appropriate privileges.This parameter can only be set at server start.