Re: hot_standby_feedback vs excludeVacuum and snapshots - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Simon Riggs
Subject Re: hot_standby_feedback vs excludeVacuum and snapshots
Date
Msg-id CANP8+jJBYt=4PpTfiPb0UrH1_iPhzsxKH5Op_Wec634F0ohnAw@mail.gmail.com
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In response to Re: hot_standby_feedback vs excludeVacuum and snapshots  (Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>)
Responses Re: hot_standby_feedback vs excludeVacuum and snapshots  (Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>)
List pgsql-hackers
On 31 March 2018 at 14:21, Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 29, 2018 at 4:47 PM, Greg Stark <stark@mit.edu> wrote:
>> I'm poking around to see debug a vacuuming problem and wondering if
>> I've found something more serious.
>>
>> As far as I can tell the snapshots on HOT standby are built using a
>> list of running xids that the primary builds and puts in the WAL and
>> that seems to include all xids from transactions running in all
>> databases. The HOT standby would then build a snapshot and eventually
>> send the xmin of that snapshot back to the primary in the hot standby
>> feedback and that would block vacuuming tuples that might be visible
>> to the standby.
>>
>> Many ages ago Alvaro sweated blood to ensure vacuums could run for
>> long periods of time without holding back the xmin horizon and
>> blocking other vacuums from cleaning up tuples. That's the purpose of
>> the excludeVacuum flag in GetCurrentVirtualXIDs(). That's possible
>> because we know vacuums won't insert any tuples that queries might try
>> to view and also vacuums won't try to perform any sql queries on other
>> tables.
>>
>> I can't find anywhere that the standby snapshot building mechanism
>> gets this same information about which xids are actually vacuums that
>> can be ignored when building a snapshot.
>>
>
> I think the vacuum assigns xids only if it needs to truncate some of
> the pages in the relation which happens towards the end of vacuum.
> So, it shouldn't hold back the xmin horizon for long.

Yes, that's the reason. I recall VACUUMs giving lots of problems
during development  of Hot Standby.

VACUUM FULL was the thing that needed to be excluded in the past
because it needed an xid to move rows.

Greg's concern is a good one and his noticing that we hadn't
specifically excluded VACUUMs is valid, so we should exclude them.
Well spotted, Greg.

So although this doesn't have the dramatic effect it might have had,
there is still the possibility of some effect and I think we should
treat it as a bug.

-- 
Simon Riggs                http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services

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