Re: errors with high connections rate - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Pawel S. Veselov
Subject Re: errors with high connections rate
Date
Msg-id 4FF2ACC1.9060804@gmail.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: errors with high connections rate  (Craig Ringer <ringerc@ringerc.id.au>)
Responses Re: errors with high connections rate
List pgsql-general
On 07/03/2012 12:34 AM, Craig Ringer wrote:
On 07/03/2012 03:19 PM, Pawel Veselov wrote:
Hi.

-- problem 1 --

I have an application, using libpq, connecting to postgres 9.1.3 (Amazon AMI distro).
The application writes data at a high rate (at this point it's 500 transaction per second), using multiple threads (at this point it's 800).

These are "worker" threads, that receive "messages" that are then written out to the DB. There is no connection pool, instead, each worker thread maintains it's own connection that it uses to write data to the database. The connections are kept pthread's "specific" data blocks.

[skipped, replied to separately]


Can't connect to DB: could not send data to server: Transport endpoint is not connected
could not send startup packet: Transport endpoint is not connected

postmaster forking and failing because of operating system resource limits like max proc count, anti-forkbomb measures, max file handles, etc?

If accept() succeeded, and fork() failed, the socket would be closed by the process (parent will close, child socket wouldn't even be forked), wouldn't that result into ECONNRESET, and not ENOTCONN?


-- problem 2 --

As I'm trying to debug this (with strace), I could never reproduce it, at least to see what's going on, but sometimes I get another error : "too many users connected". Even restarting postmaster doesn't help. The postmaster is running with -N810, and the role has connection limit of 1000. Yet, the "too many" error starts creeping up only after 275 connections are opened (counted by successful connect() from strace).

Any idea where should I dig?
See how many connections the *server* thinks exist by examining pg_stat_activity .

Check dmesg and the PostgreSQL server logs to see if you're hitting operating system limits. Look for fork() failures, unexplained segfaults, etc.

That's the thing, no segfaults (dmesg), nothing in the server logs.

It may as well be some sort of an anti-fork-bomb measure, only judging by the fact that with enough attempts, things do clear out, though I wish there would be some indication of that, and I'm still confused about the error code being ENOTCONN.

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