Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-28 Thread Thom Brown
On 19 June 2010 14:43, Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com wrote:
 It would be nice if we could make a final push to get these issues
 resolved and another beta out the door before the end of the month...

So should we expect beta3 imminently, or are these issues still outstanding?

Thanks

Thom

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-21 Thread Greg Stark
On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 4:54 AM, Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com wrote:
 I feel like we're getting off in the weeds, here.  Obviously, the user
 would ideally like the connection to the master to last forever, but
 equally obviously, if the master unexpectedly reboots, they'd like the
 slave to notice - ideally within some reasonable time period - that it
 needs to reconnect.



  There's no perfect way to distinguish the master
 croaked from the network administrator unplugged the Ethernet cable
 and is planning to plug it back in any hour now, so we'll just need
 to pick some reasonable timeout and go with it.



-- 
greg

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-21 Thread Robert Haas
On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 4:37 AM, Greg Stark gsst...@mit.edu wrote:
 On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 4:54 AM, Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com wrote:
 I feel like we're getting off in the weeds, here.  Obviously, the user
 would ideally like the connection to the master to last forever, but
 equally obviously, if the master unexpectedly reboots, they'd like the
 slave to notice - ideally within some reasonable time period - that it
 needs to reconnect.



  There's no perfect way to distinguish the master
 croaked from the network administrator unplugged the Ethernet cable
 and is planning to plug it back in any hour now, so we'll just need
 to pick some reasonable timeout and go with it.

Eh... was there supposed to be some text here?

-- 
Robert Haas
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise Postgres Company

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-21 Thread Robert Haas
On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 5:52 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 On a quick read, I think I see a problem with this: if a parameter is
 specified with a non-zero value and there is no OS support available
 for that parameter, it's an error.  Presumably, for our purposes here,
 we'd prefer to simply ignore any parameters for which OS support is
 not available.  Given the nature of these parameters, one might argue
 that's a more useful behavior in general.

 Also, what about Windows?

 Well, of course that patch hasn't been reviewed yet ... but shouldn't we
 just be copying the existing server-side behavior, as to both points?

The existing server-side behavior is apparently to do elog(LOG) if a
given parameter is unsupported; I'm not sure what the equivalent for
libpq would be.

The current code does not seem to have any special cases for Windows
in this area, but that doesn't tell me whether it works or not.  It
looks like Windows must at least report success when you ask to turn
on keepalives, but whether it actually does anything, and whether
there extra parameters exist/work, I can't tell.

-- 
Robert Haas
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise Postgres Company

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Andres Freund
On Saturday 19 June 2010 18:05:34 Joshua D. Drake wrote:
 On Sat, 2010-06-19 at 09:43 -0400, Robert Haas wrote:
  4. Streaming Replication needs to detect death of master.  We need
  some sort of keep-alive, here.  Whether it's at the TCP level (as
  advocated by Tom Lane and others) or at the protocol level (as
  advocated by Greg Stark) is something that we have yet to decide; once
  it's decided, someone will need to do it...
 
 TCP involves unknowns, such as firewalls, vpn routers and ssh tunnels. I
 humbly suggest we *not* be pedantic and implement something practical
 and less prone to variables outside the control of Pg.
 
 Sincerely,
 +
 Joshua D. Drake

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Florian Pflug
On Jun 20, 2010, at 7:18 , Tom Lane wrote:
 Florian Pflug f...@phlo.org writes:
 On Jun 19, 2010, at 21:13 , Tom Lane wrote:
 This is nonsense --- the slave's kernel *will* eventually notice that
 the TCP connection is dead, and tell walreceiver so.  I don't doubt
 that the standard TCP timeout is longer than people want to wait for
 that, but claiming that it will never happen is simply wrong.
 
 No, Robert is correct AFAIK. If you're *waiting* for data, TCP
 generates no traffic (expect with keepalive enabled).
 
 Mph.  I was thinking that keepalive was on by default with a very long
 interval, but I see this isn't so.  However, if we enable keepalive,
 then it's irrelevant to the point anyway.  Nobody's produced any
 evidence that keepalive is an unsuitable solution.

Yeah, I agree. Just enabling keepalive should suffice for 9.0. 

BTW, the postmaster already enables keepalive on incoming connections in 
StreamConnection() - presumably to prevent crashed clients from occupying a 
backend process forever. So there's even a clear precedent for doing so, and 
proof that it doesn't cause any harm.

best regards,
Florian Pflug


-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Kevin Grittner
Florian Pflug  wrote:
 On Jun 20, 2010, at 7:18 , Tom Lane wrote:
 
 I was thinking that keepalive was on by default with a very
 long interval, but I see this isn't so. However, if we enable
 keepalive, then it's irrelevant to the point anyway. Nobody's
 produced any evidence that keepalive is an unsuitable solution.

 Yeah, I agree. Just enabling keepalive should suffice for 9.0.
 
+1, with configurable timeout; otherwise people will often feel they
need to kill the receiver process to get it to attempt reconnect or
archive search, anyway.  Two hours is a long time to block
replication based on a broken connection before attempting to move
on.
 
-Kevin

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Tom Lane
Kevin Grittner kevin.gritt...@wicourts.gov writes:
 Florian Pflug  wrote:
 Yeah, I agree. Just enabling keepalive should suffice for 9.0.
 
 +1, with configurable timeout;

Right, of course.  That's already in the pending patch isn't it?

regards, tom lane

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Joshua D. Drake
On Sun, 2010-06-20 at 11:36 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
 Kevin Grittner kevin.gritt...@wicourts.gov writes:
  Florian Pflug  wrote:
  Yeah, I agree. Just enabling keepalive should suffice for 9.0.
  
  +1, with configurable timeout;
 
 Right, of course.  That's already in the pending patch isn't it?

Can someone tell me what we are going to do about firewalls that impose
their own rules outside of the control of the DBA?

I know that keepalive *should* work, however I also know that regardless
of keepalive I often have to restart sessions etc. There are
environments that are outside the control of the user.

Perhaps this has already been solved and I don't know about it. Does the
master-slave relationship have a built in ping mechanism that is
outside of the TCP protocol?

Sincerely,

Joshua D. Drake

 
   regards, tom lane
 

-- 
PostgreSQL.org Major Contributor
Command Prompt, Inc: http://www.commandprompt.com/ - 509.416.6579
Consulting, Training, Support, Custom Development, Engineering


-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Kevin Grittner
Joshua D. Drake  wrote:
 
 Can someone tell me what we are going to do about firewalls that
 impose their own rules outside of the control of the DBA?
 
Has anyone actually seen a firewall configured for something so
stupid as to allow *almost* all the various packets involved in using
a TCP connection, but which suppressed just keepalive packets?  That
seems to be what you're suggesting is the risk; it's an outlandish
enough suggestion that I think the burden of proof is on you to show
that it happens often enough to make this a worthless change.
 
-Kevin

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Kenneth Marshall
On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 03:01:04PM -0500, Kevin Grittner wrote:
 Joshua D. Drake  wrote:
  
  Can someone tell me what we are going to do about firewalls that
  impose their own rules outside of the control of the DBA?
  
 Has anyone actually seen a firewall configured for something so
 stupid as to allow *almost* all the various packets involved in using
 a TCP connection, but which suppressed just keepalive packets?  That
 seems to be what you're suggesting is the risk; it's an outlandish
 enough suggestion that I think the burden of proof is on you to show
 that it happens often enough to make this a worthless change.
  
 -Kevin
 

I have seen this sort of behavior but in every case it has been
the result of a myopic view of firewall/IP tables solutions to
perceived attacks. While I do agree that having heartbeat
within the replication process it worthwhile, it should definitely
be 9.1 material at best. For 9.0 such ill-behaved environments
will need much more interaction by the DBA with monitoring and
triage of problems as they arrive.

Regards,
Ken

P.S. My favorite example of odd behavior was preemptively dropping
TCP packets in one direction only at a single port. Many, many
odd things happen when the kernel does not know that the packet
would never make it to it destination. Services would sometimes
run for weeks without a problem depending on when the port ended
up being used invariably at night or on the weekend.

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Robert Haas
On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 11:36 AM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Kevin Grittner kevin.gritt...@wicourts.gov writes:
 Florian Pflug  wrote:
 Yeah, I agree. Just enabling keepalive should suffice for 9.0.

 +1, with configurable timeout;

 Right, of course.  That's already in the pending patch isn't it?

Is this sarcasm, or is there a pending patch I'm not aware of?

-- 
Robert Haas
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise Postgres Company

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Tom Lane
Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 11:36 AM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Right, of course.  That's already in the pending patch isn't it?

 Is this sarcasm, or is there a pending patch I'm not aware of?

https://commitfest.postgresql.org/action/patch_view?id=281

regards, tom lane

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Florian Pflug
On Jun 20, 2010, at 22:01 , Kevin Grittner wrote:
 Joshua D. Drake  wrote:
 
 Can someone tell me what we are going to do about firewalls that
 impose their own rules outside of the control of the DBA?
 
 Has anyone actually seen a firewall configured for something so
 stupid as to allow *almost* all the various packets involved in using
 a TCP connection, but which suppressed just keepalive packets?  That
 seems to be what you're suggesting is the risk; it's an outlandish
 enough suggestion that I think the burden of proof is on you to show
 that it happens often enough to make this a worthless change.

Yeah, especially since there is no such thing as a special keepalive packet 
in TCP. Keepalive simply sends packets with zero bytes of payload every once in 
a while if the connection is otherwise inactive. If those aren't acknowledged 
(like every other packet would be) by the peer, the connection is assumed to be 
broken. On a reasonably active connection, keepalive neither causes additional 
transmissions, nor altered transmissions.

Keepalive is therefore extremely unlikely to break things - in the very worst 
case, a (really, really stupid) firewall might decide to drop packets with zero 
bytes of payload, causing inactive connections to abort after a while. AFAIK 
walreceiver will simply reconnect in this case. 

Plus, the postmaster enables keepalive on all incoming connections *already*, 
so any problems ought to have caused bugreports about dropped client 
connections.

best regards,
Florian Pflug


-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Robert Haas
On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 5:32 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 11:36 AM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Right, of course.  That's already in the pending patch isn't it?

 Is this sarcasm, or is there a pending patch I'm not aware of?

 https://commitfest.postgresql.org/action/patch_view?id=281

+1 for applying something along these lines, but we'll also need to
update walreceiver to actually use one or more of these new
parameters.

On a quick read, I think I see a problem with this: if a parameter is
specified with a non-zero value and there is no OS support available
for that parameter, it's an error.  Presumably, for our purposes here,
we'd prefer to simply ignore any parameters for which OS support is
not available.  Given the nature of these parameters, one might argue
that's a more useful behavior in general.

Also, what about Windows?

-- 
Robert Haas
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise Postgres Company

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Tom Lane
Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 5:32 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 https://commitfest.postgresql.org/action/patch_view?id=281

 +1 for applying something along these lines, but we'll also need to
 update walreceiver to actually use one or more of these new
 parameters.

Right, but the libpq-level support has to come first.

 On a quick read, I think I see a problem with this: if a parameter is
 specified with a non-zero value and there is no OS support available
 for that parameter, it's an error.  Presumably, for our purposes here,
 we'd prefer to simply ignore any parameters for which OS support is
 not available.  Given the nature of these parameters, one might argue
 that's a more useful behavior in general.

 Also, what about Windows?

Well, of course that patch hasn't been reviewed yet ... but shouldn't we
just be copying the existing server-side behavior, as to both points?

regards, tom lane

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Greg Stark
On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 10:41 PM, Florian Pflug f...@phlo.org wrote:
 Yeah, especially since there is no such thing as a special keepalive packet 
 in TCP. Keepalive simply sends packets with zero bytes of payload every once 
 in a while if the connection is otherwise inactive. If those aren't 
 acknowledged (like every other packet would be) by the peer, the connection 
 is assumed to be broken. On a reasonably active connection, keepalive neither 
 causes additional transmissions, nor altered transmissions.

Actualy keep-alive packets contain one byte of data which is a
duplicate of the last previously acked byte.


 Keepalive is therefore extremely unlikely to break things - in the very worst 
 case, a (really, really stupid) firewall might decide to drop packets with 
 zero bytes of payload, causing inactive connections to abort after a while. 
 AFAIK walreceiver will simply reconnect in this case.

Stateful firewalls whole raison-d'etre is to block packets which
aren't consistent with the current TCP state -- such as packets with a
sequence number earlier than the last acked sequence number.
Keepalives do in fact violate the basic TCP spec so they wouldn't be
entirely crazy to block them. Of course a firewall that blocked them
would be pretty criminally stupid given how ubiquitous they are.

  Plus, the postmaster enables keepalive on all incoming connections
*already*, so any problems ought to have caused bugreports about
dropped client connections.


Really? Since when? I thought there was some discussion about this
about a year ago and I made it very clear this had to be an optional
feature which defaulted to off.

Keepalives introduce spurious disconnections in working TCP
connections that have transient outages which is basic TCP
functionality that's supposed to work. There are cases where that's
what you want but it isn't the kind of thing that should be on by
default, let alone on unconditionally.


-- 
greg

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Kevin Grittner
Greg Stark  wrote:
 
 Keepalives introduce spurious disconnections in working TCP
 connections that have transient outages
 
It's been a while since I read up on this, so perhaps my memory has
distorted the facts over time, but I thought that under TCP, if one
side sends a packet which isn't ack'd after a (configurable) number
of tries with certain (configurable) timings, the connection would be
considered broken and an error returned regardless of keepalive
settings.  I thought keepalive only generated a trickle of small
packets during idle time so that broken connections could be detected
on the side of a connection which was waiting to receive data before
doing something.  That doesn't sound consistent with your
characterization, though, since if my recollection is right, one
could just as easily say that any write to a TCP socket by the
application can also cause spurious disconnections in working TCP
connections that have transient outages.
 
I know that with a two minute keepalive timeout, I can unplug a
machine from one switch port and plug it in somewhere else and the
networking hardware sorts things out fast enough that the transient
network outage doesn't break the TCP connection, whether the
application is sending data or it is quiescent and the OS is sending
keepalive packets.
 
From what I've read about the present walreceiver retry logic, if the
connection breaks, WR will use some intelligence to try the archive
and retry connecting through TCP, in turn, until it finds data.  If
the connection goes silent without breaking, WR sits there forever
without looking at the archive or trying to obtain a new TCP
connection to the master.  I know which behavior I'd prefer.
Apparently the testers who encountered the behavior felt the same.
 
-Kevin

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Florian Pflug
On Jun 21, 2010, at 0:13 , Greg Stark wrote:
 Keepalive is therefore extremely unlikely to break things - in the very 
 worst case, a (really, really stupid) firewall might decide to drop packets 
 with zero bytes of payload, causing inactive connections to abort after a 
 while. AFAIK walreceiver will simply reconnect in this case.
 
 Stateful firewalls whole raison-d'etre is to block packets which
 aren't consistent with the current TCP state -- such as packets with a
 sequence number earlier than the last acked sequence number.
 Keepalives do in fact violate the basic TCP spec so they wouldn't be
 entirely crazy to block them. 

Keepalives play games with the spec, but they don't outright violate it I'd 
say. The sender bluffs by retransmitting data it *knows* has been ACK'ed. But 
since nobody else can prove with certainty that the sender actually saw that 
ACK (think NIC-internal buffer overflow), nobody is able to call that bluff. 

 Of course a firewall that blocked them
 would be pretty criminally stupid given how ubiquitous they are.


Very true, and another reason to stop worrying about possibly brain-dead 
firewalls.

 Plus, the postmaster enables keepalive on all incoming connections
 *already*, so any problems ought to have caused bugreports about
 dropped client connections.
 
 Really? Since when? I thought there was some discussion about this
 about a year ago and I made it very clear this had to be an optional
 feature which defaulted to off.

Since 'bout 10 years. The setsockopt call is in StreamConnection() in 
src/backend/libpq/pqcomm.c.

Here's the corresponding commit:

commit 5aa160abba32a1f2d7818b9f49213f38c99b3fd8
Author: Tatsuo Ishii is...@postgresql.org
Date:   Sat May 20 13:10:54 2000 +

Add KEEPALIVE option to the socket of backend. This will automatically
terminate the backend that has no frontend anymore.

 Keepalives introduce spurious disconnections in working TCP
 connections that have transient outages which is basic TCP
 functionality that's supposed to work. There are cases where that's
 what you want but it isn't the kind of thing that should be on by
 default, let alone on unconditionally.

I'd buy that if all timeouts and retry counts would default to +infinity. But 
they don't, and hence sufficiently long network outages *will* cause connection 
aborts anyway. That a particular connection might survive due to inactivity 
proves nothing, since whether the connection is active or inactive during an 
outage is usually outside of anyone's control.

I really fail to see why anyone would prefer connections (and therefore 
transactions!) getting stuck forever over a few spurious disconnects. The 
former always require manual intervention and cause all sorts of performance 
and disk-space issues, while the latter won't even be an issue for well-written 
clients who just reconnect and retry.

best regards,
Florian Pflug


-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Greg Stark
On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 12:42 AM, Florian Pflug f...@phlo.org wrote:
 I'd buy that if all timeouts and retry counts would default to +infinity. But 
 they don't, and hence sufficiently long network outages *will* cause 
 connection aborts anyway. That a particular connection might survive due to 
 inactivity proves nothing, since whether the connection is active or inactive 
 during an outage is usually outside of anyone's control.

 I really fail to see why anyone would prefer connections (and therefore 
 transactions!) getting stuck forever over a few spurious disconnects. The 
 former always require manual intervention and cause all sorts of performance 
 and disk-space issues, while the latter won't even be an issue for 
 well-written clients who just reconnect and retry.


So just as a data point I'm routinely annoyed by reopening my screen
session and finding various session sessions have died since the day
before. Usually this is caused by broken firewalls but there are also
a bunch of SSH options which some servers have enabled which cause my
sessions to never survive very long if there are any network outages.
Servers where those options are disabled work fine.

I admit this is a very different use case though and since we have
control over the behaviour when the connection breaks perhaps the
analogy falls apart completely. I'm not sure we can guarantee that
reconnecting is always so simple though. What if the user set up an
SSH gateway or needs some extra authentication to make the connection.
Are users expecting the slave to randomly disconnect and reconnect
willy nilly or are they expecting that once it connects it'll keep
using that connection forever?

-- 
greg

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-20 Thread Robert Haas
On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 9:31 PM, Greg Stark gsst...@mit.edu wrote:
 On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 12:42 AM, Florian Pflug f...@phlo.org wrote:
 I'd buy that if all timeouts and retry counts would default to +infinity. 
 But they don't, and hence sufficiently long network outages *will* cause 
 connection aborts anyway. That a particular connection might survive due to 
 inactivity proves nothing, since whether the connection is active or 
 inactive during an outage is usually outside of anyone's control.

 I really fail to see why anyone would prefer connections (and therefore 
 transactions!) getting stuck forever over a few spurious disconnects. The 
 former always require manual intervention and cause all sorts of performance 
 and disk-space issues, while the latter won't even be an issue for 
 well-written clients who just reconnect and retry.


 So just as a data point I'm routinely annoyed by reopening my screen
 session and finding various session sessions have died since the day
 before. Usually this is caused by broken firewalls but there are also
 a bunch of SSH options which some servers have enabled which cause my
 sessions to never survive very long if there are any network outages.
 Servers where those options are disabled work fine.

 I admit this is a very different use case though and since we have
 control over the behaviour when the connection breaks perhaps the
 analogy falls apart completely. I'm not sure we can guarantee that
 reconnecting is always so simple though. What if the user set up an
 SSH gateway or needs some extra authentication to make the connection.
 Are users expecting the slave to randomly disconnect and reconnect
 willy nilly or are they expecting that once it connects it'll keep
 using that connection forever?

I feel like we're getting off in the weeds, here.  Obviously, the user
would ideally like the connection to the master to last forever, but
equally obviously, if the master unexpectedly reboots, they'd like the
slave to notice - ideally within some reasonable time period - that it
needs to reconnect.  There's no perfect way to distinguish the master
croaked from the network administrator unplugged the Ethernet cable
and is planning to plug it back in any hour now, so we'll just need
to pick some reasonable timeout and go with it.  To my way of
thinking, if the master hasn't responded in a minute or two, that's a
sign that it's time to declare the connection dead.  Retrying the
connection *should* be cheap.  If the user has set things up so that a
TCP connection from slave to master is not straightforward, the user
has configured it incorrectly, and no matter what we do it's not going
to be reliable.

I still think there's a decent argument that we might want to have a
protocol-level heartbeat rather than a TCP-level heartbeat.  But doing
the latter is, I think, good enough for 9.0.  We're pretty much
speculating about what the problems with that approach might be, so
getting too worked up about fixing them at this point seems premature.

-- 
Robert Haas
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise Postgres Company

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


[HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-19 Thread Robert Haas
It would be nice to get beta3 out the door sooner rather than later,
but I sort of feel like we're not ready yet.  In fact, we seem to be a
bit stalled.  The open items list currently lists four items.

1. max_standby_delay.  Tom has committed to getting this done, but has
been tied up with non-PostgreSQL related work for the last few weeks.

2. infinite repeat of warning message in standby.  Heikki changed the
code so this isn't a tight loop any more, which is an improvement, but
we've discussed the fact that retrying forever may not be the best
behavior.

http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2010-06/msg00806.php
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2010-06/msg00838.php

I am not clear, however, on how difficult it is to implement the
proposed behavior, and I'm not sure Heikki's on board with the
proposed change.

3. supply alternate hstore operator for equals-greater in preparation
for later user in function parameter assignment.  There's some work
left to be done here but it's pretty minor.  Mostly we're arguing
about whether to call the hstore slice operator + or  or % or % --
I've written three patches to rename it so far (to three different
alternative names), one of which I committed, and there's still
ongoing discussion as to whether to rename it again and/or remove it.
Aside from that, we need to deal with the singleton-hstore constructor
(text = text); I believe the consensus there is to remove the
operator in favor of the underlying hstore(text, text) function and
backpatch that function name into the back-branches to facilitate
writing hstore code that is portable across major PostgreSQL releases.

4. Streaming Replication needs to detect death of master.  We need
some sort of keep-alive, here.  Whether it's at the TCP level (as
advocated by Tom Lane and others) or at the protocol level (as
advocated by Greg Stark) is something that we have yet to decide; once
it's decided, someone will need to do it...

It would be nice if we could make a final push to get these issues
resolved and another beta out the door before the end of the month...

-- 
Robert Haas
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise Postgres Company

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-19 Thread Joshua D. Drake
On Sat, 2010-06-19 at 09:43 -0400, Robert Haas wrote:

 4. Streaming Replication needs to detect death of master.  We need
 some sort of keep-alive, here.  Whether it's at the TCP level (as
 advocated by Tom Lane and others) or at the protocol level (as
 advocated by Greg Stark) is something that we have yet to decide; once
 it's decided, someone will need to do it...

TCP involves unknowns, such as firewalls, vpn routers and ssh tunnels. I
humbly suggest we *not* be pedantic and implement something practical
and less prone to variables outside the control of Pg.

Sincerely,

Joshua D. Drake


-- 
PostgreSQL.org Major Contributor
Command Prompt, Inc: http://www.commandprompt.com/ - 509.416.6579
Consulting, Training, Support, Custom Development, Engineering


-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-19 Thread Greg Stark
On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 2:43 PM, Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com wrote:
 4. Streaming Replication needs to detect death of master.  We need
 some sort of keep-alive, here.  Whether it's at the TCP level (as
 advocated by Tom Lane and others) or at the protocol level (as
 advocated by Greg Stark) is something that we have yet to decide; once
 it's decided, someone will need to do it...

This sounds like a useful feature but I don't see why it's not 9.1
material. The status quo is that the expected usage pattern is manual
failover. As long as the slave responds to manual intervention when in
this state I don't think this is a blocking issue. Monitoring and
automatic failover are clearly things we plan to add features to
handle better in the future.


-- 
greg

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-19 Thread Robert Haas
On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 2:46 PM, Greg Stark gsst...@mit.edu wrote:
 On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 2:43 PM, Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com wrote:
 4. Streaming Replication needs to detect death of master.  We need
 some sort of keep-alive, here.  Whether it's at the TCP level (as
 advocated by Tom Lane and others) or at the protocol level (as
 advocated by Greg Stark) is something that we have yet to decide; once
 it's decided, someone will need to do it...

 This sounds like a useful feature but I don't see why it's not 9.1
 material. The status quo is that the expected usage pattern is manual
 failover. As long as the slave responds to manual intervention when in
 this state I don't think this is a blocking issue. Monitoring and
 automatic failover are clearly things we plan to add features to
 handle better in the future.

Right now, if the SR master reboots unexpectedly (say, power plug pull
and restart), the slave never notices.  It just sits there forever
waiting for the next byte of data from the master to arrive (which it
never will).  You have to manually restart the server or hit
walreceiver with a SIGTERM to get it to start streaming agian.  I
guess we could decide we're just not going to deal with that, but it
seems like a fairly large misfeature to me.

-- 
Robert Haas
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise Postgres Company

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-19 Thread Tom Lane
Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 Right now, if the SR master reboots unexpectedly (say, power plug pull
 and restart), the slave never notices.  It just sits there forever
 waiting for the next byte of data from the master to arrive (which it
 never will).

This is nonsense --- the slave's kernel *will* eventually notice that
the TCP connection is dead, and tell walreceiver so.  I don't doubt
that the standard TCP timeout is longer than people want to wait for
that, but claiming that it will never happen is simply wrong.

I think that enabling slave-side TCP keepalives and control of the
keepalive timeout parameters is probably sufficient for 9.0 here.

regards, tom lane

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-19 Thread Andres Freund
On Saturday 19 June 2010 18:05:34 Joshua D. Drake wrote:
 On Sat, 2010-06-19 at 09:43 -0400, Robert Haas wrote:
  4. Streaming Replication needs to detect death of master.  We need
  some sort of keep-alive, here.  Whether it's at the TCP level (as
  advocated by Tom Lane and others) or at the protocol level (as
  advocated by Greg Stark) is something that we have yet to decide; once
  it's decided, someone will need to do it...
 
 TCP involves unknowns, such as firewalls, vpn routers and ssh tunnels. I
 humbly suggest we *not* be pedantic and implement something practical
 and less prone to variables outside the control of Pg.
And has the huge advantage of being implementable in about 5 lines of C 
(setsockopt + error checking). Considering what time in the release cycle this 
is...

Andres

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-19 Thread Stefan Kaltenbrunner

On 06/19/2010 09:13 PM, Tom Lane wrote:

Robert Haasrobertmh...@gmail.com  writes:

Right now, if the SR master reboots unexpectedly (say, power plug pull
and restart), the slave never notices.  It just sits there forever
waiting for the next byte of data from the master to arrive (which it
never will).


This is nonsense --- the slave's kernel *will* eventually notice that
the TCP connection is dead, and tell walreceiver so.  I don't doubt
that the standard TCP timeout is longer than people want to wait for
that, but claiming that it will never happen is simply wrong.

I think that enabling slave-side TCP keepalives and control of the
keepalive timeout parameters is probably sufficient for 9.0 here.


yeah I would agree - we do have tcp keepalive code in the backend for a 
while now and adding that to libpq as well just seems like an easy 
enough fix at this time in the release cycle.



Stefan

--
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-19 Thread Florian Pflug
On Jun 19, 2010, at 21:13 , Tom Lane wrote:
 Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 Right now, if the SR master reboots unexpectedly (say, power plug pull
 and restart), the slave never notices.  It just sits there forever
 waiting for the next byte of data from the master to arrive (which it
 never will).
 
 This is nonsense --- the slave's kernel *will* eventually notice that
 the TCP connection is dead, and tell walreceiver so.  I don't doubt
 that the standard TCP timeout is longer than people want to wait for
 that, but claiming that it will never happen is simply wrong.

No, Robert is correct AFAIK. If you're *waiting* for data, TCP generates no 
traffic (expect with keepalive enabled). From the slave's kernel POV, a dead 
master is therefore indistinguishable from a inactive master.

Things are different from a sender's POV, though. Since sent data is ACK'ed by 
the receiving end, the TCP stack can (and does) detect a broken connection.

best regards,
Florian Pflug


-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-19 Thread Simon Riggs
On Sat, 2010-06-19 at 14:53 -0400, Robert Haas wrote:
 On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 2:46 PM, Greg Stark gsst...@mit.edu wrote:
  On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 2:43 PM, Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com wrote:
  4. Streaming Replication needs to detect death of master.  We need
  some sort of keep-alive, here.  Whether it's at the TCP level (as
  advocated by Tom Lane and others) or at the protocol level (as
  advocated by Greg Stark) is something that we have yet to decide; once
  it's decided, someone will need to do it...
 
  This sounds like a useful feature but I don't see why it's not 9.1
  material. The status quo is that the expected usage pattern is manual
  failover. As long as the slave responds to manual intervention when in
  this state I don't think this is a blocking issue. Monitoring and
  automatic failover are clearly things we plan to add features to
  handle better in the future.
 
 Right now, if the SR master reboots unexpectedly (say, power plug pull
 and restart), the slave never notices.  It just sits there forever
 waiting for the next byte of data from the master to arrive (which it
 never will).  You have to manually restart the server or hit
 walreceiver with a SIGTERM to get it to start streaming agian.  I
 guess we could decide we're just not going to deal with that, but it
 seems like a fairly large misfeature to me.

Are you saying it doesn't respond to a trigger file any any point? That
would be a problem.

Sounds like we should have a pg_restart_walreceiver() function. We
shouldn't be encouraging people to send signals to backends, its too
easy to get wrong.

-- 
 Simon Riggs   www.2ndQuadrant.com
 PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training and Services


-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers


Re: [HACKERS] beta3 the open items list

2010-06-19 Thread Tom Lane
Florian Pflug f...@phlo.org writes:
 On Jun 19, 2010, at 21:13 , Tom Lane wrote:
 This is nonsense --- the slave's kernel *will* eventually notice that
 the TCP connection is dead, and tell walreceiver so.  I don't doubt
 that the standard TCP timeout is longer than people want to wait for
 that, but claiming that it will never happen is simply wrong.

 No, Robert is correct AFAIK. If you're *waiting* for data, TCP
 generates no traffic (expect with keepalive enabled).

Mph.  I was thinking that keepalive was on by default with a very long
interval, but I see this isn't so.  However, if we enable keepalive,
then it's irrelevant to the point anyway.  Nobody's produced any
evidence that keepalive is an unsuitable solution.

regards, tom lane

-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers