Re: pg_xlog-files not deleted on a standby after accidental server crash - Mailing list pgsql-admin
From | Paul Dunkler |
---|---|
Subject | Re: pg_xlog-files not deleted on a standby after accidental server crash |
Date | |
Msg-id | 5B4FA413-7B14-410B-A258-FEC290F35C96@xyrality.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: pg_xlog-files not deleted on a standby after accidental server crash (naveen kumar <mnaveendba2@gmail.com>) |
List | pgsql-admin |
Hi there, > archive_cleanup_command = 'pg_archivecleanup <archive_location> %r' > > Refer this, it will help you. > http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.3/static/pgarchivecleanup.html No that can´t help me - sorry than it seems you didn't got my problem. The "data/pg_xlog" folder is filling up and not getting deleted on the slave. I don't have any problem with the "archive"on slave. I don't even have an "archive" on the slave... By the way, my restore-command on the slave is configured to get the xlog_archives via rsync from the master´s xlog_archiveif it needs so. But thats only needed for startup recovery time after creating the slave from a base backup -and that works like expected... > Thanks & Regards, > M Naveen Kuamr, > PostgreSQL Database Administrator, > Mobile Number: +91 7755929449. > > On Wed, Mar 25, 2015 at 3:40 PM, Paul Dunkler <paul.dunkler@xyrality.com> wrote: > Hi there, > > thanks for your answer. We already have some "replay delay" checks implemented in nagios, which is showing fine for thisinstance. > > Anyway, i have tested all your commands (thanks, i didn't knew some of them), but the result is still the same. Replicationis fine and is not lagging... But pg_xlog content is growing and growing and growing. > > [root@ct-db1b pg_xlog]# ls -la | wc -l > 1479 > > > > I might be wrong, because Im one of the growing up guy in the PostgreSQL world. But you can try this. > > > > I guess your salve is running properly, I think applying all WALs is taking time. > > > > Bellow commands are use full check replication status. > > > > 1. pg_stat_replication view on master/primary server. > > > > postgres=# select * from pg_stat_replication ; > > postgres=# select * from pg_stat_replication; > pid | usesysid | usename | application_name | client_addr | client_hostname | client_port | backend_start | backend_xmin | state | sent_location | write_location | flush_location | replay_location | sync_priority | sync_state > -------+----------+----------+------------------+-------------+-----------------+-------------+------------------------------+--------------+-----------+---------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+---------------+------------ > 15919 | 10 | postgres | walreceiver | 172.16.0.2 | | 50495 | 2015-03-24 09:46:12.59108+00| | streaming | CA/CB1345F8 | CA/CB1345F8 | CA/CB1345F8 | CA/CB1345B8 | 0 | async > (1 row) > > > 2. pg_is_in_recovery() : Function which tells whether standby is still in recovery mode or not. > > > > postgres=# select pg_is_in_recovery(); > > postgres=# select pg_is_in_recovery(); > pg_is_in_recovery > ------------------- > t > (1 row) > > > 3. pg_last_xlog_receive_location: Function which tells location of last transaction log which was streamed by Standbyand also written on standby disk. > > > > postgres=# select pg_last_xlog_receive_location(); > > 4. pg_last_xlog_replay_location: Function which tells last transaction replayed during recovery process. > > > > postgres=# select pg_last_xlog_replay_location(); > > > > 5. pg_last_xact_replay_timestamp: This function tells about the time stamp of last transaction which was replayed duringrecovery. Below is an example: > > > > postgres=# select pg_last_xact_replay_timestamp(); > > postgres=# select pg_last_xlog_receive_location(); select pg_last_xlog_replay_location(); select pg_last_xact_replay_timestamp(); > pg_last_xlog_receive_location > ------------------------------- > CA/CAF27218 > (1 row) > > pg_last_xlog_replay_location > ------------------------------ > CA/CAF27218 > (1 row) > > pg_last_xact_replay_timestamp > ------------------------------- > 2015-03-25 09:54:54.766285+00 > (1 row) > > > > 6. Lags in Bytes: For calculating lags in bytes, users can use the pg_stat_replication view on the master with the functionpg_xlog_location_diff function. > > > > postgres=# select pg_xlog_location_diff(pg_stat_replication.sent_location, pg_stat_replication.replay_location); > > postgres=# SELECT client_hostname, client_addr, pg_xlog_location_diff(pg_stat_replication.sent_location, pg_stat_replication.replay_location)AS byte_lag FROM pg_stat_replication; > client_hostname | client_addr | byte_lag > -----------------+-------------+---------- > | 172.16.0.2 | 13024 > (1 row) > > > 7.Calculating lags in Seconds. The following is SQL, which most people uses to find the lag in seconds: > > > > SELECT CASE WHEN pg_last_xlog_receive_location() = pg_last_xlog_replay_location()THEN 0 ELSE EXTRACT (EPOCH FROM now()- pg_last_xact_replay_timestamp()) > > END AS log_delay; > > postgres=# SELECT CASE WHEN pg_last_xlog_receive_location() = pg_last_xlog_replay_location()THEN 0 ELSE EXTRACT (EPOCHFROM now() - pg_last_xact_replay_timestamp()) > END AS log_delay; > log_delay > ----------- > 0 > (1 row) > > > 8.If the slave is up in hot standby mode, you can tell the time in seconds the delay of transactions applied on the slavewith this query: > > > > postgres=# select now() - pg_last_xact_replay_timestamp() AS replication_delay; > > postgres=# select now() - pg_last_xact_replay_timestamp() AS replication_delay; > replication_delay > ------------------- > 00:00:00.296506 > (1 row) > > > And please verify archive_cleanup_command in recovery.conf on slave. > > I don't use this command on any slaves... > > > > > > > Thanks & Regards, > > M Naveen Kuamr, > > PostgreSQL Database Administrator, > > Mobile Number: +91 7755929449. > > > > On Tue, Mar 24, 2015 at 9:47 PM, Paul Dunkler <paul.dunkler@xyrality.com> wrote: > > Hi there, > > > > i am currently encountering a weird problem: > > > > 3 Days ago we had an accidental server crash on one of our database servers (system just restarted). > > After it was up again, i restarted databases (we are running 4 instances of postgres on a 512GB / 64 Processor server).All databases came up fine again. > > Afterwards i restarted the slave postgres instances (running on another physical server) and they could recover correctlyand went ahead with receiving WAL via streaming replication. All fine so far. > > > > Then i realized that only on 1 of the 4 slave instances, the WAL-File count under data/pg_xlog was raising and raising,seems like WAL files are not reused / deleted by postgres. > > Afterwards i tried different things: > > 1. Restarted the slave multiple times without any effect on the xlog behaviour > > 2. Setting up the slave again from a fresh base backup of the master instance > > 3. Checking file permissions, even tried manually deleting a WAL-File under data/pg_xlog (which worked) > > > > Now i'm running out of ideas why these files are not reused/deleted anymore. > > I don't see any errors in the logfiles (not on slave, not on master). > > > > Slave is only showing normal "restartpoint" logs: > >> Mar 24 10:51:10 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [3-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint starting: time > >> Mar 24 10:53:42 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [4-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint complete: wrote 21264 buffers (0.4%);0 transaction log file(s) added, 0 removed, 16 recycled; write=149.345 s, sync=2.217 s, total=151.682 s; sync files=1156,longest=0.213 s, average=0.001 s > >> Mar 24 10:53:42 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [5-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: recovery restart point at C3/E9AD3258 > >> Mar 24 10:53:42 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [5-2] db=, user=, host= DETAIL: last completed transaction was at log time2015-03-24 09:53:42.247769+00 > >> Mar 24 10:56:10 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [6-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint starting: time > >> Mar 24 10:58:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [7-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint complete: wrote 6402 buffers (0.1%);0 transaction log file(s) added, 0 removed, 3 recycled; write=149.516 s, sync=1.101 s, total=150.757 s; sync files=729,longest=0.160 s, average=0.001 s > >> Mar 24 10:58:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [8-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: recovery restart point at C3/EDA836D8 > >> Mar 24 10:58:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [8-2] db=, user=, host= DETAIL: last completed transaction was at log time2015-03-24 09:58:40.611415+00 > >> Mar 24 11:01:10 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [9-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint starting: time > >> Mar 24 11:03:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [10-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint complete: wrote 11746 buffers (0.2%);0 transaction log file(s) added, 0 removed, 5 recycled; write=149.652 s, sync=0.936 s, total=150.725 s; sync files=672,longest=0.147 s, average=0.001 s > >> Mar 24 11:03:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [11-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: recovery restart point at C3/F046DA18 > >> Mar 24 11:03:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [11-2] db=, user=, host= DETAIL: last completed transaction was at log time2015-03-24 10:03:40.914148+00 > >> Mar 24 11:06:10 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [12-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint starting: time > >> Mar 24 11:08:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [13-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint complete: wrote 11155 buffers (0.2%);0 transaction log file(s) added, 0 removed, 4 recycled; write=149.780 s, sync=1.184 s, total=151.080 s; sync files=758,longest=0.184 s, average=0.001 s > >> Mar 24 11:08:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [14-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: recovery restart point at C3/F3C51B40 > >> Mar 24 11:08:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [14-2] db=, user=, host= DETAIL: last completed transaction was at log time2015-03-24 10:08:41.087379+00 > >> Mar 24 11:11:10 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [15-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint starting: time > >> Mar 24 11:13:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [16-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint complete: wrote 12602 buffers (0.2%);0 transaction log file(s) added, 0 removed, 2 recycled; write=149.632 s, sync=1.309 s, total=151.067 s; sync files=728,longest=0.203 s, average=0.001 s > >> Mar 24 11:13:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [17-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: recovery restart point at C3/F93AC8F0 > >> Mar 24 11:13:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [17-2] db=, user=, host= DETAIL: last completed transaction was at log time2015-03-24 10:13:41.168975+00 > >> Mar 24 11:16:10 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [18-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint starting: time > >> Mar 24 11:18:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [19-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint complete: wrote 10234 buffers (0.2%);0 transaction log file(s) added, 0 removed, 0 recycled; write=149.411 s, sync=1.175 s, total=150.703 s; sync files=821,longest=0.142 s, average=0.001 s > >> Mar 24 11:18:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [20-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: recovery restart point at C3/FDD61320 > >> Mar 24 11:18:41 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [20-2] db=, user=, host= DETAIL: last completed transaction was at log time2015-03-24 10:18:41.052593+00 > >> Mar 24 11:21:10 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [21-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint starting: time > >> Mar 24 11:23:40 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [22-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: restartpoint complete: wrote 9105 buffers (0.2%);0 transaction log file(s) added, 0 removed, 0 recycled; write=149.598 s, sync=0.842 s, total=150.579 s; sync files=687,longest=0.061 s, average=0.001 s > >> Mar 24 11:23:40 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [23-1] db=, user=, host= LOG: recovery restart point at C4/290A078 > >> Mar 24 11:23:40 ct-db1b ct-db1-1[65432]: [23-2] db=, user=, host= DETAIL: last completed transaction was at log time2015-03-24 10:23:40.446308+00 > > > > Postgres-Version: > > > >> postgres=# select version(); > >> version > >> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > >> PostgreSQL 9.4.1 on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu, compiled by gcc (GCC) 4.4.7 20120313 (Red Hat 4.4.7-4), 64-bit > >> (1 row) > > > > I would really appreciate somebodies advice on this. > > > > Thanks in advance. -- Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Kind regards Paul Dunkler
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