On Thursday 12 May 2005 10:24, Tom Lane wrote:
> Andrew - Supernews <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > What currently happens is that backends respond to kill -15 (_NOT_ -9)
> > by cleaning up and exiting. This code path is used for implementing the
> > stop -mfast option, which means that as it currently exists, the cleanup
> > only has to be good enough to let other backends get out of critical
> > sections and complete their own rollback-and-exit safely.
>
> Exactly.  In theory it probably works fine to allow one backend to exit
> via kill -TERM, but it cannot be claimed that that behavior has been
> tested to any significant extent --- "fast" shutdown is not stressing it
> in the same way.
>
> I think this is largely a question of someone doing a significant amount
> of stress testing: gun live server processes with "kill -TERM" in an
> active system, and keep an eye out for resource leaks, held locks, and
> so on.  It would be more convincing if the processes getting zapped are
> executing a wide variety of SQL, too --- I'd not feel very confident
> given only tests of killing, say, pgbench threads.
>

Cause I know you wont be satisfied with anecdotal evidence, I thought I would 
just say that I have done kill's on specific backends in a high load OLTP 
process, with 1000+ active connections, for years and not had a problem with 
it yet.   

Not that I wouldn't like to see some specific, thorough testing on the matter, 
but I'm perfectly comfortable with the previously provided function.

-- 
Robert Treat
Build A Brighter Lamp :: Linux Apache {middleware} PostgreSQL

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