Re: Read Replica termination occurs when its max_active_replication_origins setting is lower than the primary
От | Nathan Bossart |
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Тема | Re: Read Replica termination occurs when its max_active_replication_origins setting is lower than the primary |
Дата | |
Msg-id | aMo3tsESKXh6MCVp@nathan обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Read Replica termination occurs when its max_active_replication_origins setting is lower than the primary (Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: Read Replica termination occurs when its max_active_replication_origins setting is lower than the primary
Re: Read Replica termination occurs when its max_active_replication_origins setting is lower than the primary Re: Read Replica termination occurs when its max_active_replication_origins setting is lower than the primary |
Список | pgsql-bugs |
On Tue, Sep 16, 2025 at 09:05:33PM -0700, Masahiko Sawada wrote: > On Tue, Sep 16, 2025 at 7:45 PM Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com> wrote: >> I haven't tried reproducing it on older versions (with >> max_replication_slots instead of max_active_replication_origins), but after >> looking at the code for a bit, I'm growing skeptical that this is new to >> v18. > > Right, it's actually not a new behavior to v18 as we can reproduce it > with max_replication_slots. I guess that the reason why we didn't > require standbys to set max_replication_slots no smaller than the > primary's value is that in principle the maximum number of replication > slots is not related to the recovery work. max_replication_slots juse > used to be re-used for the maximum number of active replication > origins for the sake of simplicity. Now that we have separated the > maximum number of active replication origins from > max_replication_slots, it seems to me that > max_active_replication_origins is now clearly related to the recovery. Given that it's existing behavior, I'm not seeing a strong reason to try to do anything about this for v18. But I could be misunderstanding the nuance here. >> In any case, the PANIC provides a clear error message, which is >> roughly the same as what we'd say with the control file approach, right? > > Yes. With the control file approach, we raise a FATAL (or pause the > recovery with a WARNING) instead of PANIC. I drafted up what that would look like. One very small nitpick is that it messes up the alignment of the pg_controldata output. Otherwise, it seems pretty straightforward. -- nathan
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