On Mon, 2004-08-09 at 09:07, lec wrote:
> Scott Marlowe wrote: 
> > On Sun, 2004-08-08 at 21:26, Alvaro Herrera Munoz wrote:
> >   
> > > On Sun, Aug 08, 2004 at 08:36:36PM -0600, Scott Marlowe wrote:
> > >     
> > > > On Sun, 2004-08-08 at 19:43, lec wrote:
> > > >       
> > > > > If I commit the following records 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10 to the database 
> > > > > and the server hangs, I could lose records 5,6,7,8,9 but record 10 is 
> > > > > there.  How is this possible and do anyone know how Postgresql 
> > > > > physically writes the records?
> > > > >         
> > > > Assuming a properly function storage subsystem and a kernel that does
> > > > not lie about fsync, this is not possible.
> > > >       
> I'm using Redhat 7.3, kernel 2.4.18
> > > It is actually possible if he uses several backends to do the job, and
> > > transaction inserting record 10 commits before the hang, and 5,6,7,8,9
> > > don't.
> > >     
> Just 1 backend.
> > Yeah, but he explicitly said he'd committed 1 through 10.  Unless he
> > didn't understand what is meant by commit.  I.e. committing AND
> > receiving the ack for that commit.  Until the database says it
> > committed, nothing's been committed, so he might have thought just
> > firing the insert query was committing.  I hadn't really thought of that
> > angle.
> > 
> > Is that the case, lec?
> >   
> I explicitly 'COMMIT'
> >   
> > > If this is only one backend, then I'd love to see how did he do that.
> > >     
> > Me too :-)
> > 
> > 
> >   
> That's exactly leaving me puzzled.  I don't know if it has anything to
> do with the SCSI controller or hardware related stuff.  The controller
> is a RAID, configured are RAID-5.

Does that RAID controller have NON battery backed cache?


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