Re: [HACKERS] Point in Time Recovery - Mailing list pgsql-admin

From Simon Riggs
Subject Re: [HACKERS] Point in Time Recovery
Date
Msg-id 1090482198.2660.4.camel@localhost.localdomain
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: [HACKERS] Point in Time Recovery  (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>)
List pgsql-admin
On Thu, 2004-07-22 at 04:29, Tom Lane wrote:
> Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> writes:
> > I think we should push the partially complete WAL file to the archive
> > location before shutdown. ...
> > When you are running and finally fill up the WAL file it would then
> > overwrite the one in the archive but I think that is OK.
>
> I don't think this can fly at all.  Here are some off-the-top-of-the-head
> objections:
>
> 1. We don't have the luxury of spending indefinite amounts of time to
> do a database shutdown.  Commonly we are under a twenty-second sentence
> of death from init.  I don't want to spend the 20 seconds waiting to see
> if the archiver will manage to push 16MB onto a slow tape drive.  Also,
> if the archiver does fail to push the data in time, it'll likely leave a
> broken (partial) xlog file in the archive, which would be really bad
> news if the user then relies on that.
>
> 2. What if the archiver process entirely fails to push the file?  (Maybe
> there's not enough disk space, for instance.)  In normal operation we'll
> just retry every so often.  We definitely can't do that during shutdown.
>
> 3. You're blithely assuming that the archival process can easily provide
> overwrite semantics for multiple pushes of the same xlog filename.  Stop
> thinking about "cp to some directory" and start thinking "dump to tape"
> or "burn onto CD" or something like that.  We'll be raising the ante
> considerably if we require the archive_command to deal with this.
>
> I think the last one is really the most significant issue.  We have to
> keep the archiver API as simple as possible.
>

Not read whole chain of conversation...but this idea came up before and
was rejected then. I agree with the 3 objections to that thought above.

There's already enough copies of full xlogs around to worry about.

If you need more granularity, reduce size of xlog files....

(Tom, SUID would be the correct timeline id in that situation? )

More later, Simon Riggs


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