> On Mar 30, 2019, at 10:54 AM, Gmail <robjsargent@gmail.com> wrote: > > >>>> On Mar 29, 2019, at 6:58 AM, Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote: >>> >>> On Thu, Mar 28, 2019 at 09:53:16AM -0600, Rob Sargent wrote: >>> This is pg10 so it's pg_wal. ls -ltr >>> >>> >>> -rw-------. 1 postgres postgres 16777216 Mar 16 16:33 >>> 0000000100000CEA000000B1 >>> -rw-------. 1 postgres postgres 16777216 Mar 16 16:33 >>> 0000000100000CEA000000B2 >>> >>> ... 217 more on through to ... >>> >>> -rw-------. 1 postgres postgres 16777216 Mar 16 17:01 >>> 0000000100000CEA000000E8 >>> -rw-------. 1 postgres postgres 16777216 Mar 16 17:01 >>> 0000000100000CEA000000E9 >>> -rw-------. 1 postgres postgres 16777216 Mar 28 09:46 >>> 0000000100000CEA0000000E > I’m now down to 208 Mar 16 WAL files so they are being processed (at least deleted). I’ve taken a snapshot of the pg_wal dir such that I can see which files get processed. It’s none of the files I’ve listed previously
Two more have been cleaned up. 001C and 001D generated at 16:38 Mar 16
Please share your complete postgresql.conf file and the results from this query:
SELECT * FROM pg_settings;
has someone in the past configured wal archiving?
You've ran out of disk space as this log message you shared states: