Re: pgsql: Fix and document lock handling for in-memory replicationslot da - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Andres Freund
Subject Re: pgsql: Fix and document lock handling for in-memory replicationslot da
Date
Msg-id 20180611164952.vmxdpdpirdtkdsz6@alap3.anarazel.de
Whole thread Raw
Responses Re: pgsql: Fix and document lock handling for in-memory replicationslot da
Re: pgsql: Fix and document lock handling for in-memory replicationslot da
List pgsql-hackers
Hi,

On 2018-06-10 10:45:04 +0000, Michael Paquier wrote:
> Fix and document lock handling for in-memory replication slot data
>
> While debugging issues on HEAD for the new slot forwarding feature of
> Postgres 11, some monitoring of the code surrounding in-memory slot data
> has proved that the lock handling may cause inconsistent data to be read
> by read-only callers of slot functions, particularly
> pg_get_replication_slots() which fetches data for the system view
> pg_replication_slots, or modules looking directly at slot information.
>
> The code paths involved in those problems concern logical decoding
> initialization (down to 9.4) and WAL reservation for slots (new as of
> 10).
>
> A set of comments documenting all the lock handlings, particularly the
> dependency with LW locks for slots and the in_use flag as well as the
> internal mutex lock is added, based on a suggested by Simon Riggs.
>
> Some of the fixed code exists down to 9.4 where WAL decoding has been
> introduced, but as those race conditions are really unlikely going to
> happen as those concern code paths for slot and decoding creation, just
> fix the problem on HEAD.

You can't do things like:

            /* start at current insert position */
+           SpinLockAcquire(&slot->mutex);
            slot->data.restart_lsn = GetXLogInsertRecPtr();
+           SpinLockRelease(&slot->mutex);

a) we don't call external functions with a spinlock held. As a
   rule. It's too hard to se what happens in that other function / too
   likely to change independently.

b) we most certainly don't do it if the other function also acquires a
   spinlock:
XLogRecPtr
GetXLogInsertRecPtr(void)
{
    XLogCtlInsert *Insert = &XLogCtl->Insert;
    uint64        current_bytepos;

    SpinLockAcquire(&Insert->insertpos_lck);
    current_bytepos = Insert->CurrBytePos;
    SpinLockRelease(&Insert->insertpos_lck);

    return XLogBytePosToRecPtr(current_bytepos);
}

   Nesting spinlock means that you'd need to be very careful about
   whether all lockers use the same order. And be ok with the system
   stalled until the PANIC if it failed.

Same is true for the codepaths calling GetRedoRecPtr().


I don't object to the general idea of adding locking - although the
benefit are nearly guaranteed to be cosmetic - but this has the
potential to make things worse.

- Andres


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