> On 18 Aug 2015, at 10:32, Albe Laurenz <laurenz.a...@wien.gv.at> wrote: > > Victor Wagner wrote: >> Rationale >> ========= >> >> Since introduction of the WAL-based replication into the PostgreSQL, it is >> possible to create high-availability and load-balancing clusters. >> >> However, there is no support for failover in the client libraries. So, only >> way to provide transparent for client application failover is IP address >> migration. This approach has some limitation, i.e. it requires that >> master and backup servers reside in the same subnet or may not be >> feasible for other reasons. >> >> Commercial RDBMS, such as Oracle, employ more flexible approach. They >> allow to specify multiple servers in the connect string, so if primary >> server is not available, client library tries to connect to other ones. >> >> This approach allows to use geographically distributed failover clusters >> and also is a cheap way to implement load-balancing (which is not >> possible with IP address migration). > > I wonder how useful this is at the present time. > > If the primary goes down and the client gets connected to the standby, > it would have read-only access there. Most applications wouldn't cope > well with that. > > Once we have multi-master replication that can be used for fail-over, > the picture will change. Then a feature like that would be very useful > indeed. > >> "host=main-server host=standby1 host=standby2 port=5432 dbname=database" > > It seems a bit arbitrary to require that all servers use the same port. > > Maybe parameters like host2, port2, host3, port3 etc. might be better. > > Yours, > Laurenz Albe
i totally agree with laurenz. in addition to that you have the “problem” of transactions. if you failover in the middle of a transaction, strange things might happen from the application point of view. the good thing, however, is that stupid middleware is sometimes not able to handle failed connections. however, overall i think it is more of a danger than a benefit. regards, hans > > -- > Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) > To make changes to your subscription: > http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers