On Tue, Mar 29, 2022 at 3:17 PM Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote:
> 1) How to react to corrupted statsfiles?
>
> IMO it'd make more sense to just throw away all stats
> in that case.
That seems reasonable to me. I think there's some downside, in that
stats are important, and having some of them might be better than
having none of them. On the other hand, stats file corruption should
be very rare, and if it's not, we need to fix that. I think what's
actually most important here is the error reporting. We need to make
it clear, at least via log messages, that something bad has happened.
And maybe we should have, inside the stats system, something that
keeps track of when the stats file was last recreated from scratch
because of a corruption event, separately from when it was last
intentionally reset.
> 2) What do we want to do with stats when starting up in recovery?
>
> Today we throw out stats whenever crash recovery is needed. Which includes
> starting up a replica DB_SHUTDOWNED_IN_RECOVERY.
>
> The shared memory stats patch loads the stats in the startup process (whether
> there's recovery or not). It's obviously no problem to just mirror the current
> behaviour, we just need to decide what we want?
>
> The reason we throw stats away before recovery seem to originate in concerns
> around old stats being confused for new stats. Of course, "now" that we have
> streaming replication, throwing away stats *before* recovery, doesn't provide
> any sort of protection against that. In fact, currently there's no automatic
> mechanism whatsoever to get rid of stats for dropped objects on a standby.
Does redo update the stats?
> 3) Does anybody care about preserving the mishmash style of function comments
> present in pgstat? There's at least:
I can't speak for everyone in the universe, but I think it should be
fine to clean that up.
> I'm inclined to just do a pass through the files and normalize the comment
> styles, in a separate commit. Personally I'd go for no ---, no copy of the
> function name, no tabs - but I don't really care as long as it's consistent.
+1 for that style.
--
Robert Haas
EDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com