On Thu, Jul 13, 2017 at 1:15 AM, Michael Paquier <michael.paqu...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> On Thu, Jul 13, 2017 at 5:26 AM, Jeff Janes <jeff.ja...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > I think that none of the recovery information functions
> > (https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.6/static/functions-admin.
> html#FUNCTIONS-RECOVERY-INFO-TABLE)
> > can distinguish a hot standby which is connected to an idle master,
> versus
> > one which is disconnected.  For example, because the master has crashed,
> or
> > someone has changed the firewall rules.
> >
> > Is there a way to monitor from SQL the last time the standby was able to
> > contact the master and initiate streaming with it?  Other than trying to
> > write a function that parses it out of pg_log?
>
> Not directly I am afraid. One way I can think about is to poll
> periodically the state of pg_stat_replication on the primary or
> pg_stat_wal_receiver on the standby and save it in a custom table. The
> past information is not persistent as any replication-related data in
> catalogs is based on the shared memory state of the WAL senders and
> the WAL receiver, and those are wiped out at reconnection.
>

Thanks, that looks like what I want (or will be, once I get the other side
to upgrade to 9.6).

I think that pg_stat_wal_receiver should be crossreferenced in
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.6/static/hot-standby.html, near the same
place which it crossreferences table 9-79.  That would make it more
discoverable.

Cheers,

Jeff

Reply via email to