On Fri, Mar 26, 2010 at 5:17 PM, David Kerr <dmk@mr-paradox.net> wrote:
> Howdy all,
>
> I have some apps that are connecting to my DB via direct JDBC and I'd like to pool their connections.
>
> I've been looking at poolers for a while, and pgbouncer and pgpool-ii seem to be some of the most popular, so
> i've started with those.
>
>
> I'm setting up pgbouncer, and i've hit a bit of a snag. Hopefully someone can tell me if pgbouncer or pgpool are
> capable of this (and if so, how to do it) or alternatly a pooler that can...
>
> What I'd like to be able to do is this (not using pooler syntax, this is just a high level of what i want to achive)
>
> Say i set max pool size = 10 connections. and max # of pools = 5.
>
> That means that i should have 5 connections to my database covering 50 connections total.
>
> I can't really seem to make that work with pgbouncer without naming the pools separetly. (pool1 = dbname = a, pool2 =
dbname=a)
> which means my app is tied to a pool (or has to specifically code to rotate pools...) which is not really desireable.
I have a lot of respect for pgbouncer (haven't used pgpool). One
possible way to do what you're thinking is to rotate the pool on user.
In bouncer each database role gets its own pool (if you understand
how transaction mode works you can see why it has to work this way).
Not sure if this is helpful. Why are you trying to separate the pools
like that?
merlin