Re: BUG #14999: pg_rewind corrupts control file global/pg_control - Mailing list pgsql-bugs
From | TipTop Labs |
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Subject | Re: BUG #14999: pg_rewind corrupts control file global/pg_control |
Date | |
Msg-id | D2684F73-AE17-453B-ACB5-9CF0A7F6856E@tiptop-labs.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: BUG #14999: pg_rewind corrupts control file global/pg_control (Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>) |
Responses |
Re: BUG #14999: pg_rewind corrupts control file global/pg_control
|
List | pgsql-bugs |
1. I can confirm that your patch is effective also in my Docker-based test setup and with the current REL_10_STABLE code base (i.e. PostgreSQL 10.2).
2. Your patch is more encompassing than the one I had submitted earlier, and it may be the right way to go. It is cleaner but more "complicated" in that it may require enlisting/recognizing all those special files (pg_control, filenode.map, etc). IMO the earlier patch would already/tolerate handle those, because the distinction it makes is not based on whether something is a configuration file, but purely on whether it is writable.
3. Sorry for the late response :)
2. Your patch is more encompassing than the one I had submitted earlier, and it may be the right way to go. It is cleaner but more "complicated" in that it may require enlisting/recognizing all those special files (pg_control, filenode.map, etc). IMO the earlier patch would already/tolerate handle those, because the distinction it makes is not based on whether something is a configuration file, but purely on whether it is writable.
3. Sorry for the late response :)
On Jan 15, 2018, at 8:25 AM, Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com> wrote:On Fri, Jan 05, 2018 at 04:36:22AM +0100, TipTop Labs wrote:On Jan 5, 2018, at 2:26 AM, Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com> wrote:
On Fri, Jan 5, 2018 at 5:06 AM, PG Bug reporting form
<noreply@postgresql.org> wrote:I have encountered a bug in PostgreSQL 10.1: when the target directory for
pg_rewind contains a read-only file (e.g. server.key), pg_rewind exits with
"could not open target file" (legitimate) and corrupts the control file
global/pg_control to size 0 (bug). From now on, pg_rewind always exits with
"unexpected control file size 0, expected 8192" and a restore from
pg_basebackup is needed.
Likely that's reproducible down to 9.5 where pg_rewind has been
introduced. I agree that we should do better with failure handling
here. Corrupting the control file is not cool.
I can already confirm that this also occurs with PostgreSQL 9.6.
As far as I can see, this happens because of the way the 'remote' mode
of pg_rewind considers a set of files to truncate or not. Attached is a
patch which does things in a more correct way. The key point here is to
make the difference between a relation file and a configuration file
when building the filemap for copying a file in full. When a
configuration file is not readable, then trying to open it should not be
a failure. When using a relation file, there should be failures. There
are still two things I am not completely happy about:
- pg_control is considered as a configuration file with this patch,
however we should fail it pg_control is not readable. In practice I
guess that this should not happen, and the patch produces a warning
message. I think that we should consider add a special handling for
things like pg_control, filenode.map. etc. so as you get a hard failure
if those are not readable, so they should enter in the category of
FILE_ACTION_COPY_DATA. This needs a bit more thoughts in
process_source_file().
- open_target_file() resets manually errno. This is necessary as this
gets called continuously when processing the same file in remote mode. I
tried as well to make open_target_file and close_target_file one-time
operations for each file, but the result was even more ugly, so I went
up with this solution.
I am adding that to the next CF to not forget about it. This approach
is back-patchable down to 9.5 in my opinion. I have added as well a TAP
test in the patch which is able to reproduce the problem.
Thoughts?
--
Michael
<rewind-readonly-fix-v1.patch>
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