Re: BUG #16129: Segfault in tts_virtual_materialize in logicalreplication worker - Mailing list pgsql-bugs
From | Tomas Vondra |
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Subject | Re: BUG #16129: Segfault in tts_virtual_materialize in logicalreplication worker |
Date | |
Msg-id | 20191121143503.nkdwgjwb7xjopeuq@development Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: BUG #16129: Segfault in tts_virtual_materialize in logicalreplication worker (Ondřej Jirman <ienieghapheoghaiwida@xff.cz>) |
Responses |
Re: BUG #16129: Segfault in tts_virtual_materialize in logicalreplication worker
|
List | pgsql-bugs |
On Thu, Nov 21, 2019 at 02:55:23PM +0100, Ondřej Jirman wrote: >On Thu, Nov 21, 2019 at 02:32:37PM +0100, Tomas Vondra wrote: >> On Thu, Nov 21, 2019 at 01:59:13PM +0100, Ondřej Jirman wrote: >> > On Thu, Nov 21, 2019 at 12:53:26PM +0100, postgresql wrote: >> > > Hello, >> > > >> > > On Thu, Nov 21, 2019 at 11:39:40AM +0100, Tomas Vondra wrote: >> > > > On Thu, Nov 21, 2019 at 01:14:18AM +0000, PG Bug reporting form wrote: >> > > > > Replication of one of my databases (running on ARMv7 machine) started >> > > > > segfaulting on the subscriber side (x86_64) like this: >> > > > > >> > > > > #0 0x00007fc259739917 in __memmove_sse2_unaligned_erms () from >> > > > > /usr/lib/libc.so.6 >> > > > > #1 0x000055d033e93d44 in memcpy (__len=620701425, __src=<optimized out>, >> > > > > __dest=0x55d0356da804) at /usr/include/bits/string_fortified.h:34 >> > > > > #2 tts_virtual_materialize (slot=0x55d0356da3b8) at execTuples.c:235 >> > > > > #3 0x000055d033e94d32 in ExecFetchSlotHeapTuple >> > > > > (slot=slot@entry=0x55d0356da3b8, materialize=materialize@entry=true, >> > > > > shouldFree=shouldFree@entry=0x7fff0e7cf387) at execTuples.c:1624 >> > > >> > > I forgot to add that publisher is still PostgreSQL 11.5. >> > > >> > >> > I can also add that I have data checksumming enabled on both ends, and >> > it did not detect any corruption: >> > >> > # pg_verify_checksums -D /var/lib/postgres/data >> > Checksum scan completed >> > Data checksum version: 1 >> > Files scanned: 1751 >> > Blocks scanned: 86592 >> > Bad checksums: 0 >> > >> > # pg_checksums /var/lib/postgres/data >> > Checksum operation completed >> > Files scanned: 22777 >> > Blocks scanned: 3601527 >> > Bad checksums: 0 >> > Data checksum version: 1 >> > >> > WAL log on the publisher is also dumpable to a state hours after the issues >> > started: >> > >> > I've put the dump here, if it's of any use: https://megous.com/dl/tmp/wal_dump.txt >> > >> > Dump ends with: >> > >> > pg_waldump: FATAL: error in WAL record at 2/BBE0E538: invalid record length at 2/BBE0E5A8: wanted 24, got 0 >> > >> > But that seems normal. I get that error on my other database clusters, too. >> > >> > I managed to extract the failing logical decoding data from the publisher, if >> > that helps: >> > >> > >> > SELECT * FROM pg_logical_slot_peek_binary_changes('l5_hometv', NULL, NULL, 'proto_version', '1', 'publication_names','pub'); >> > >> > 2/BBD86EA0 | 56395 | \x4200000002bbd880b800023acd790ce5510000dc4b >> > 2/BBD87E90 | 56395 | \x5200004a687075626c696300766964656f73006400080169640000000017ffffffff007469746c650000000019ffffffff00636f7665725f696d6167650000000011ffffffff006d657461646174610000000edafffffff >> > f0063617465676f72790000000017ffffffff007075626c6973686564000000043affffffff006164646564000000045affffffff00706c617965640000000010ffffffff >> > 2/BBD87E90 | 56395 | \x5500004a684e0008740000000438333933740000005650617a6465726b613a204f206dc3a964696120736520706f7665646520626f6a2e204b64796279206ec3a17320706f6c6974696369206d696c6f76616c692c20627 >> > 96c6f206279206ec49b636f20c5a17061746ec49b7574000001397b226964223a20226430313064343430303965323131656162323539616331663662323230656538222c202264617465223a2022323031392d31312d3138222c20226e616d65223a20 >> > 2250617a6465726b613a204f206dc3a964696120736520706f7665646520626f6a2e204b64796279206ec3a17320706f6c6974696369206d696c6f76616c692c2062796c6f206279206ec49b636f20c5a17061746ec49b222c2022696d616765223a202 >> > 268747470733a2f2f63646e2e7873642e637a2f726573697a652f63353535656239633131353333313632386164666539396237343534353731655f657874726163743d302c302c313931392c313038305f726573697a653d3732302c3430355f2e6a70 >> > 673f686173683d6362316362623836336230353361613561333761346666616439303865303431227d7400000003323432740000000a323031392d31312d3138740000001a323031392d31312d31382031323a35303a30312e383136333736740000000 >> > 174 >> > 2/BBD880E8 | 56395 | \x430000000002bbd880b800000002bbd880e800023acd790ce551 >> > >> >> Can you show the whole transaction? From the WAL dump it seems it just >> did a single UPDATE: > >I'm not sure what you mean. The above is the whole output I got from that >SELECT. > >> rmgr: Heap len (rec/tot): 59/ 4075, tx: 56395, lsn: 2/BBD86EA0, prev 2/BBD86E68, desc: LOCK off 2: xid56395: flags 0 LOCK_ONLY EXCL_LOCK >> blkref #0: rel 1663/19030/19048 fork main blk 415 (FPW); hole: offset: 56, length: 4176 >> rmgr: Heap len (rec/tot): 523/ 523, tx: 56395, lsn: 2/BBD87E90, prev 2/BBD86EA0, desc: HOT_UPDATE off2 xmax 56395 ; new off 9 xmax 0 >> blkref #0: rel 1663/19030/19048 fork main blk 415 >> rmgr: Transaction len (rec/tot): 46/ 46, tx: 56395, lsn: 2/BBD880B8, prev 2/BBD87E90, desc: COMMIT 2019-11-2023:28:47.016273 CET >> >> Which fields does it update? > >The only update that my system does in this database is: > >UPDATE videos SET played = TRUE WHERE id = ? > >The rest is just inserts: > >INSERT INTO categories (name, metadata, cover_image, provider) VALUES (?, ?, ?, (SELECT id FROM providers WHERE system_name= ?)) >INSERT INTO videos (title, metadata, cover_image, category, published) VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?, ?) > >There are no other data modification statements executed. > Well, this is definitely the updated - both judging by the WAL dump and also because the backtrace contains apply_handle_update. Can you show us \d+ on the videos table? What's the replica identity? regards -- Tomas Vondra http://www.2ndQuadrant.com PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
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