Re: Active connections are terminated because of small wal_sender_timeout - Mailing list pgsql-general

From AYahorau@ibagroup.eu
Subject Re: Active connections are terminated because of small wal_sender_timeout
Date
Msg-id OF22E93345.D55CA354-ON4325842E.002C1DDD-4325842E.002C40A1@iba.by
Whole thread Raw
In response to Active connections are terminated because of small wal_sender_timeout  (AYahorau@ibagroup.eu)
Responses Re: Active connections are terminated because of small wal_sender_timeout  (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>)
List pgsql-general
Hello Everyone!
Do you have any thoughts regarding this issue?

Best regards,
Andrei Yahorau



From:        Andrei Yahorau/IBA
To:        pgsql-general@postgresql.org,
Date:        21/06/2019 11:14
Subject:        Active connections are terminated because of small wal_sender_timeout



Hello PostgreSQL Community!

Not long ago I opened an issue regarding the problem about:
"terminating walsender process due to replication timeout" problem:
https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/OF85C33E30.171C1C23-ON432583F9.003F5B16-432583F9.003FBAD7%40iba.by

Thanks Everyone for your comprehensive explanations.
Basically I faced this problem because of small wal_sender_timeout value (1 second) and quite large volume of data to be replicated.
There were some assumptions about some problems with my network. But during my investigation I assured that it was not network problem.


I took a look in postgresql source code. As far as I understood walsender can send some data to walreceiver regarding some changes and so-called keepalive messages.
Exactly these keepalive messages walsender sends periodically once per wal_sender_timeout seconds (once per 1 second in my case) and expects to get responses from the walreceiver that everything goes ok.


I switched on trace and repeated my test. I found out that walreceiver  starts processing of the "keepalive" message in 3 seconds after its sending.
As far as I understand it happened because walreceiver was busy by accepting all the changes from the master and writing it to its standby WAL logs.
So the standby postgres log was overloaded overfilled by the entries  regarding writing its own WALs:
18642 2019-05-28 05:08:31 EDT 00000 DEBUG: record known xact 559  latestObservedXid 559
18642 2019-05-28 05:08:31 EDT 00000 CONTEXT: WAL redo at 0/112CE9C0 for Heap/LOCK: off 53: xid 559: flags 0 LOCK_ONLY EXCL_LOCK
18642 2019-05-28 05:08:31 EDT 00000 DEBUG: record known xact 559 latestObservedXid 559
18642 2019-05-28 05:08:31 EDT 00000 CONTEXT: WAL redo at 0/112CE9F8 for Heap/UPDATE: off 53 xmax 559 ; new off 129 xmax 0
18642 2019-05-28 05:08:31 EDT 00000 DEBUG: record known xact 559 latestObservedXid 559
18642 2019-05-28 05:08:31 EDT 00000 CONTEXT: WAL redo at 0/112CEA48 for Heap/LOCK: off 54: xid 559: flags 0 LOCK_ONLY EXCL_LOCK
18642 2019-05-28 05:08:31 EDT 00000 DEBUG: record known xact 559 latestObservedXid 559
18642 2019-05-28 05:08:31 EDT 00000 CONTEXT: WAL redo at 0/112CEA80 for Heap/UPDATE: off 54 xmax 559 ; new off 130 xmax 0
18642 2019-05-28 05:08:31 EDT 00000 DEBUG: record known xact 559 latestObservedXid 559

So because of writing large volume of data it was not able to handle the next messages quickly. It seems not to be related to network bandwidth or CPU saturation.

Thereby, I see some kind of a contradiction with the official description of wal_sender_timeout parameter:
Terminate replication connections that are inactive longer than the specified number of milliseconds.
This is useful for the sending server to detect a standby crash or network outage.


During my test the connection between master and standby was active and there was no any network outage. So according to the description there was no need to terminate replication connection.


So, I have some questions:
Is there any way (e. g. via configuration of other) to make the response
time to keepalive messages independent of the amount of data that the walreceiver has to process?
If there is no such a way is it possible to update wal_sender_timeout documentation so it reflects reality?



Best regards,
Andrei Yahorau

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