On Thu, Feb 26, 2026 at 10:28 AM Ashutosh Sharma <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > > > > Proposal: > > > > > > Make synchronized_standby_slots quorum aware i.e. extend the GUC to > > > accept an ANY M (slot1, slot2, ...) syntax similar to > > > synchronous_standby_names, so StandbySlotsHaveCaughtup() can return true > > > when M of N slots (where M <= N and M >= 1) have caught up. I still > > > prefer two different GUCs for this as the list of slots to be > > > synchronized can still be different (for example, DBA may want to ensure > > > Geo standby to be sync before allowing the logical decoding client to > > > read the changes). I kept synchronized_standby_slots parse logic similar > > > to synchronous_standby_names to keep things simple. The default > > > behavior is also not changed for synchronized_standby_slots. > > > ... > > Thinking about this further, using quorum settings for > synchronized_standby_slots can/will certainly result in at least one > sync standby lagging behind the logical replica, making it probably > impossible to continue with the existing logical replication setup > after a failover to the standby that lags behind. Here is what I am > mean: >
But won't that be true even for synchronous_standby_names? I think in the case of quorum, it is the responsibility of the failover solution to select the most recent synced standby among all the standby's specified in synchronous_standby_names. Similarly here before failing over logical subscriber to one of physical standby, the failover tool needs to ensure it is switching over to the synced replica. We have given steps in the docs [1] that could be used to identify the replica where the subscriber can switchover. Will that address your concern? BTW, I have also suggested this idea in thread [2]. I don't recall all the ideas/points discussed in that thread but it would be good to check that thread for any alternative ideas and points raised, so that we don't miss anything. [1] - https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/logical-replication-failover.html [2] - https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAA4eK1KLFdmj8CLrZNL0D4phqyQihb7NXOjmqvrU5DT8moQn9Q%40mail.gmail.com -- With Regards, Amit Kapila.
