Re: postgres 9 bind address for replication - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Andrew Dunstan
Subject Re: postgres 9 bind address for replication
Date
Msg-id 500D9BC2.2030202@dunslane.net
Whole thread Raw
In response to postgres 9 bind address for replication  (Adam Crews <adam.crews@gmail.com>)
Responses Re: postgres 9 bind address for replication  (Adam Crews <adam.crews@gmail.com>)
Re: postgres 9 bind address for replication  (Magnus Hagander <magnus@hagander.net>)
Re: postgres 9 bind address for replication  (Adam Crews <adam.crews@gmail.com>)
List pgsql-hackers
On 07/23/2012 02:23 PM, Adam Crews wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 23, 2012 at 8:34 AM, Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Sat, Jul 21, 2012 at 1:24 AM, Adam Crews <adam.crews@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I'm sorry for cross-posting, however I originally posted this to
>>> pgsql-general list, but didnt get any replies.
> Then I posted to pgsql-cluster-hackers..., and now here.
>
>>>
>>> I’m using pg 9.1.3 on CentOS 5 and have a few slave databases setup
>>> using the built in streaming replication.
>>>
>>> On the slaves I set the “listen_addresses” config option to an ip
>>> address for a virtual alias on my network interfaces.  The host has an
>>> address of 10.1.1.10, and there is a virtual alias of 10.1.1.40 that
>>> the slave postmaster binds to.
>>>
>>> When the slave makes it connection to the master to start replication
>>> the source address for the connection is the host address, not the
>>> virtual alias address.  Connections appear to come from 10.1.1.10,
>>> instead of the slave postmaster address of 10.1.1.40.
>>>
>>> This seems like a bug to me.  I could understand that if the
>>> postmaster is listening on all interfaces, then it should use whatever
>>> the IP is for the for the host, but in an instance where the
>>> postmaster has been configured to listen to a specific address it
>>> seems like the call to start the replication should be passed that
>>> address so connections come from the slave postmaster’s IP, instead of
>>> the host.
>>>
>>> Is there a config option that can be used to adjust this?  I've looked
>>> in the docs, but haven't found one yet.
>>>
>>> Is this perhaps a bug, or lack of feature?
>> I don't think it's a bug, because the behavior you're hoping for might
>> not be what everyone would want in a similar situation.  It might
>> qualify as an unimplemented feature.
>>
>> This mailing list isn't heavily used and this seems a bit off-topic
>> for it anyway; you might want to try a different one for further
>> discussion of this issue.
>>
> So, I think this, as Robert states, an unimplemented feature.
>
> For my situation it would be very useful to have an option to be able
> to specify the source address for replication.
>
> I discovered this because I bind the listen address for postgres to a
> single address even though the host system may have multiple
> addresses.  I then use that single address in iptables rules on other
> systems.  Since I expect the slave to be at a .40 address, but the
> replication comes from the primary address of the interface (in this
> case .10), my iptables rules were missing the access for the slave to
> connect to the master.
>
> This site http://linux-ip.net/html/routing-saddr-selection.html
> describes the behavior I'm seeing.
>
> How do I go about requesting a config option that would allow me to
> specify the source address for the replication connections?
>

You just have :-)

You could just add an iptables rule redirecting .10 packets on port 5432
(or whatever you're using) appropriately.

We don't have any provision for binding the local end of any connection
AFAIK. So the first question is "Do we want to?" and the second is "If
yes, when and how?" I don't see that replication should be a special
case - if this is worth providing for it should be applicable to all
clients, ISTM.

cheers

andrew


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