Re: [HACKERS] make async slave to wait for lsn to be replayed - Mailing list pgsql-hackers
From | Kartyshov Ivan |
---|---|
Subject | Re: [HACKERS] make async slave to wait for lsn to be replayed |
Date | |
Msg-id | 22f4011c9fc31b8050054cc446b0c10f@postgrespro.ru Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: [HACKERS] make async slave to wait for lsn to be replayed (Peter Eisentraut <peter@eisentraut.org>) |
List | pgsql-hackers |
Thank you for your feedback. On 2024-03-20 12:11, Alexander Korotkov wrote: > On Wed, Mar 20, 2024 at 12:34 AM Kartyshov Ivan > <i.kartyshov@postgrespro.ru> wrote: >> > 4.2 With an unreasonably high future LSN, BEGIN command waits >> > unboundedly, shouldn't we check if the specified LSN is more than >> > pg_last_wal_receive_lsn() error out? > > I think limiting wait lsn by current received lsn would destroy the > whole value of this feature. The value is to wait till given LSN is > replayed, whether it's already received or not. Ok sounds reasonable, I`ll rollback the changes. > But I don't see a problem here. On the replica, it's out of our > control to check which lsn is good and which is not. We can't check > whether the lsn, which is in future for the replica, is already issued > by primary. > > For the case of wrong lsn, which could cause potentially infinite > wait, there is the timeout and the manual query cancel. Fully agree with this take. >> > 4.3 With an unreasonably high wait time, BEGIN command waits >> > unboundedly, shouldn't we restrict the wait time to some max > value, >> > say a day or so? >> > SELECT pg_last_wal_receive_lsn() + 1 AS future_receive_lsn \gset >> > BEGIN AFTER :'future_receive_lsn' WITHIN 100000; >> >> Good idea, I put it 1 day. But this limit we should to discuss. > > Do you think that specifying timeout in milliseconds is suitable? I > would prefer to switch to seconds (with ability to specify fraction of > second). This was expressed before by Alexander Lakhin. It sounds like an interesting idea. Please review the result. >> > https://github.com/macdice/redo-bench or similar tools? > > Ivan, could you do this? Yes, test redo-bench/crash-recovery.sh This patch on master 91.327, 1.973 105.907, 3.338 98.412, 4.579 95.818, 4.19 REL_13-STABLE 116.645, 3.005 113.212, 2.568 117.644, 3.183 111.411, 2.782 master 124.712, 2.047 117.012, 1.736 116.328, 2.035 115.662, 1.797 Strange behavior, patched version is faster then REL_13-STABLE and master. > I don't see this change in the patch. Normally if a process gets a > signal, that causes WaitLatch() to exit immediately. It also exists > immediately on query cancel. IIRC, this 1 minute timeout is needed to > handle some extreme cases when an interrupt is missing. Other places > have it equal to 1 minute. I don't see why we should have it > different. Ok, I`ll rollback my changes. >> 4) added and expanded sections in the documentation > > I don't see this in the patch. I see only a short description in > func.sgml, which is definitely not sufficient. We need at least > everything we have in the docs before to be adjusted with the current > approach of procedure. I didn't find another section where to add the description of pg_wait_lsn(). So I extend description on the bottom of the table. >> 5) add default variant of timeout >> pg_wait_lsn(trg_lsn pg_lsn, delay int8 DEFAULT 0) >> example: pg_wait_lsn('0/31B1B60') equal pg_wait_lsn('0/31B1B60', 0) > > Does zero here mean no timeout? I think this should be documented. > Also, I would prefer to see the timeout by default. Probably one > minute would be good for default. Lets discuss this point. Loop in function WaitForLSN is made that way, if we choose delay=0, only then we can wait infinitely to wait LSN without timeout. So default must be 0. Please take one more look on the patch. PS sorry, the strange BUG throw my mails out of thread. https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/f2ff071aa9141405bb8efee67558a058%40postgrespro.ru -- Ivan Kartyshov Postgres Professional: www.postgrespro.com
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