Re: Review for GetWALAvailability() - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Alvaro Herrera
Subject Re: Review for GetWALAvailability()
Date
Msg-id 20200617024056.GA21726@alvherre.pgsql
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Review for GetWALAvailability()  (Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com>)
Responses Re: Review for GetWALAvailability()
List pgsql-hackers
On 2020-Jun-17, Fujii Masao wrote:
> On 2020/06/17 3:50, Alvaro Herrera wrote:

> So InvalidateObsoleteReplicationSlots() can terminate normal backends.
> But do we want to do this? If we want, we should add the note about this
> case into the docs? Otherwise the users would be surprised at termination
> of backends by max_slot_wal_keep_size. I guess that it's basically rarely
> happen, though.

Well, if we could distinguish a walsender from a non-walsender process,
then maybe it would make sense to leave backends alive.  But do we want
that?  I admit I don't know what would be the reason to have a
non-walsender process with an active slot, so I don't have a good
opinion on what to do in this case.

> > > +        /*
> > > +         * Signal to terminate the process using the replication slot.
> > > +         *
> > > +         * Try to signal every 100ms until it succeeds.
> > > +         */
> > > +        if (!killed && kill(active_pid, SIGTERM) == 0)
> > > +            killed = true;
> > > +        ConditionVariableTimedSleep(&slot->active_cv, 100,
> > > +                                    WAIT_EVENT_REPLICATION_SLOT_DROP);
> > > +    } while (ReplicationSlotIsActive(slot, NULL));
> > 
> > Note that here you're signalling only once and then sleeping many times
> > in increments of 100ms -- you're not signalling every 100ms as the
> > comment claims -- unless the signal fails, but you don't really expect
> > that.  On the contrary, I'd claim that the logic is reversed: if the
> > signal fails, *then* you should stop signalling.
> 
> You mean; in this code path, signaling fails only when the target process
> disappears just before signaling. So if it fails, slot->active_pid is
> expected to become 0 even without signaling more. Right?

I guess kill() can also fail if the PID now belongs to a process owned
by a different user.  I think we've disregarded very quick reuse of
PIDs, so we needn't concern ourselves with it.

-- 
Álvaro Herrera                https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services



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