Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-08 Thread Alvaro Herrera
David Fetter wrote:
 On Thu, Jan 07, 2010 at 03:32:28PM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:

  [ shrug... ]  To me, HS+SR is actual replication, which would
  justify tagging this release 9.0.  With only one of them, it's 8.5.
  I understand that there are power users who would find HS alone to
  be tremendously useful, but in terms of what the average user sees,
  there's a quantum difference.
 
 By, quantum, do you mean, the smallest possible?

When you're an electron, a quantum leap is enormous ...

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Robert Haas
On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 3:03 AM, Heikki Linnakangas
heikki.linnakan...@enterprisedb.com wrote:
 Fujii Masao wrote:
 I've done that in my git branch.

 Could you push that git branch to a public place?

 Ahh, sorry, forgot that again. It's there now, at
 git://git.postgresql.org/git/users/heikki/postgres.git, branch
 'replication'.

I'm feeling like we're running out of time to get this committed.
Committing large patches late in the release cycle is a recipe for a
buggy beta, possibly a long beta, and a buggy release, and we're now
down to 8 days before the start of the final CommitFest, after which
our schedule indicates that we expect to put out an alpha and a beta
relatively quickly.  If this isn't ready to go, maybe we need to
postpone it to 8.6.  We've already had a bunch of bug reports (some of
which have been fixed) as a result of HS, and I don't see any reason
to believe that this isn't going to have the same problem.

Personally, I would rather have a release without SR in June or July
than a release with SR in August or September.  We already have too
many good features in the tree to hold up the whole process for
patches that aren't ready yet - though like everyone else, I think
this is a killer feature.

Thoughts?

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Devrim GÜNDÜZ
On Thu, 2010-01-07 at 11:55 -0500, Robert Haas wrote:

 Personally, I would rather have a release without SR in June or July
 than a release with SR in August or September.  

If SR will be ready until then, I'd like to see a release in September
which has SR in it. We already postponed SR a lot. Many of advocacy
people including me already mentioned about SR, and many people are
lookig after it. BTW, July probably won't be a good time for a new
release, because of people's holidays.

...and maybe then we can start 8.5 - 9.0 thread.

Regards,
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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Magnus Hagander
2010/1/7 Devrim GÜNDÜZ dev...@gunduz.org:
 On Thu, 2010-01-07 at 11:55 -0500, Robert Haas wrote:

 Personally, I would rather have a release without SR in June or July
 than a release with SR in August or September.

June, yes. July, frankly, no, because July == September, when it comes
to any such scheduling. At least in the countries where my clients are
:)


 If SR will be ready until then, I'd like to see a release in September
 which has SR in it. We already postponed SR a lot. Many of advocacy
 people including me already mentioned about SR, and many people are
 lookig after it. BTW, July probably won't be a good time for a new
 release, because of people's holidays.

-1. Frankly, if advocacy people said it would be there, they didn't
tell the truth, and that's their problem. If they said hopefully it
will be there, but we don't know yet, then they don't have a problem
either way.

Not having our release schedule driven by marketing is a *strength* of
our project!

We made the mistake last time to delay the release significantly for a
single feature. It turned out said feature didn't make it *anyway*.
Let's not repeat that mistake.


 ...and maybe then we can start 8.5 - 9.0 thread.




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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Andres Freund
On Thursday 07 January 2010 18:10:43 Magnus Hagander wrote:
 Not having our release schedule driven by marketing is a *strength* of
 our project!
Yes.

 We made the mistake last time to delay the release significantly for a
 single feature. It turned out said feature didn't make it *anyway*.
 Let's not repeat that mistake.
I would consider SR to be significantly less complex than HS though.
What about giving it two weeks from now on to be in a comittable state? Last 
time the main discussion started a good while *after* the last commitfest...

Andres

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Robert Haas
2010/1/7 Magnus Hagander mag...@hagander.net:
 2010/1/7 Devrim GÜNDÜZ dev...@gunduz.org:
 On Thu, 2010-01-07 at 11:55 -0500, Robert Haas wrote:

 Personally, I would rather have a release without SR in June or July
 than a release with SR in August or September.

 June, yes. July, frankly, no, because July == September, when it comes
 to any such scheduling. At least in the countries where my clients are
 :)

In terms of when the release comes out, maybe.  In terms of the NEXT
release, it still matters.  If the release is delayed, the first
CommitFest of the next release will be that much later.  If we put out
a release by July 1 of this year, we can repeat the same schedule for
the next release that we are using for this release and I will be
happy with that.  If we don't put out a release until September, our
first CommitFest will be at least 2 months later than it was for the
last one, which means that (1) we will have a gap of 8 months without
a CommitFest and (2) 8.6 will have no chance of coming out before
September 2011, and may end up being more like Thanksgiving if that
one also slips.

I really don't want to go 8 months with no CommitFest.  That leads to
too many patches in the queue, too many merge conflicts, too many
patch authors who just plain give up, and no feedback to anyone for a
very, very long time.

 If SR will be ready until then, I'd like to see a release in September
 which has SR in it. We already postponed SR a lot. Many of advocacy
 people including me already mentioned about SR, and many people are
 lookig after it. BTW, July probably won't be a good time for a new
 release, because of people's holidays.

 -1. Frankly, if advocacy people said it would be there, they didn't
 tell the truth, and that's their problem. If they said hopefully it
 will be there, but we don't know yet, then they don't have a problem
 either way.

 Not having our release schedule driven by marketing is a *strength* of
 our project!

 We made the mistake last time to delay the release significantly for a
 single feature. It turned out said feature didn't make it *anyway*.
 Let's not repeat that mistake.

Indeed.

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Tom Lane
Magnus Hagander mag...@hagander.net writes:
 We made the mistake last time to delay the release significantly for a
 single feature. It turned out said feature didn't make it *anyway*.
 Let's not repeat that mistake.

Yeah, we've certainly learned that lesson often enough, or should I say
failed to learn that lesson?

However, HS is already in the tree, and HS without SR is a whole lot
less compelling than HS with SR.  So it's going to be pretty
unsatisfying if we can't get SR in there.

I read Robert's original question not so much as a proposal to slip the
schedule to accommodate SR as a question about whether SR could still
meet the current schedule.  I think we ought to get that answered before
we start debating schedule changes.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Greg Sabino Mullane

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 However, HS is already in the tree, and HS without SR is a whole lot
 less compelling than HS with SR.  So it's going to be pretty
 unsatisfying if we can't get SR in there.

I don't think that's the case. Having HS alone would be a huge win,
and the sooner we can get it out there the better. Those that are
waiting for SR might have to wait one more version, but my intuition
tells me that's a small minority compared to those waiting for HS.

- --
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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Stefan Kaltenbrunner

Greg Sabino Mullane wrote:

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However, HS is already in the tree, and HS without SR is a whole lot
less compelling than HS with SR.  So it's going to be pretty
unsatisfying if we can't get SR in there.


I don't think that's the case. Having HS alone would be a huge win,
and the sooner we can get it out there the better. Those that are
waiting for SR might have to wait one more version, but my intuition
tells me that's a small minority compared to those waiting for HS.


while I agree that HS is very useful without SR, I think that it's 
mostly the well known powerusers inthe community are actively waiting 
for HS and not so much for SR. For the typical user outside of -hackers 
or even -general I'm not so sure about that...



Stefan

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Robert Haas
On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 12:24 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Magnus Hagander mag...@hagander.net writes:
 We made the mistake last time to delay the release significantly for a
 single feature. It turned out said feature didn't make it *anyway*.
 Let's not repeat that mistake.

 Yeah, we've certainly learned that lesson often enough, or should I say
 failed to learn that lesson?

I think the latter phrasing is more accurate.

 However, HS is already in the tree, and HS without SR is a whole lot
 less compelling than HS with SR.  So it's going to be pretty
 unsatisfying if we can't get SR in there.


 I read Robert's original question not so much as a proposal to slip the
 schedule to accommodate SR as a question about whether SR could still
 meet the current schedule.  I think we ought to get that answered before
 we start debating schedule changes.

Unfortunately, we've also discovered from hard experience that the
timing of commits is difficult to predict unless the answer is
something like today or tomorrow.  I'm not terribly interested in
an estimate of when this will be committed if it's much more distant
than that because experience indicates that such estimates are
typically inaccurate, usually on the optimistic side.  I seem to
recall Heikki estimating two weeks for SR about this time last year,
and of course it took a lot longer than that, even if you subtract out
the breaks in the action.  That's not because Heikki is a bad
estimator; it's just that estimating how long a particular piece of
code will take to finish is extremely difficult and almost no one can
do it with any degree of accuracy.  It is the things the programmer
can't foresee that push out the end date, and of course you can't know
how many of those there will be.

I like Andres' suggestion upthread of setting a deadline and
determining to bounce the patch if it's not committed by that date.
If it turns out we have to bounce it, that stinks, but I don't think
it makes sense to go to beta with a huge, barely-tested pile of code
in the tree.  Not that the testing Heikki and Fujii Masao have been
doing until now hasn't been good, but it's not nearly as rigorous as
what we will get when all of our users start banging on it.

The problem with even TALKING about changing the schedule is that we
will have no idea what to change it TO.  If we add two months to the
schedule today, that will probably increase the chances of SR getting
committed within that time frame (unless, of course, Heikki's employer
uses that as an excuse to take him off the project for two months...)
but we don't know how much because we can't predict how long it's
going to take to be ready.  If someone could show us a curve with
probability on one axis and commit date on the other axis we could
probably make a good decision about where to slice it off, but that
isn't possible.

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Greg Sabino Mullane

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 while I agree that HS is very useful without SR, I think that it's
 mostly the well known powerusers inthe community are actively waiting
 for HS and not so much for SR. For the typical user outside of -hackers
 or even -general I'm not so sure about that...

Well, I can state that we have plenty of clients that would be very
interested in HS, but none that would really care if it came without
SR. This power user knows a lot of people outside of -hackers and
- -general and they are what I'm basing my opinion on. :)

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Tom Lane
Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 I like Andres' suggestion upthread of setting a deadline and
 determining to bounce the patch if it's not committed by that date.
 If it turns out we have to bounce it, that stinks, but I don't think
 it makes sense to go to beta with a huge, barely-tested pile of code
 in the tree.  Not that the testing Heikki and Fujii Masao have been
 doing until now hasn't been good, but it's not nearly as rigorous as
 what we will get when all of our users start banging on it.

This argument would hold more water if there weren't *already* a huge,
barely-tested pile of code in the tree, namely HS.  If you think that's
anywhere near ready to go to beta, I'm afraid I'd better disillusion
you immediately.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Robert Haas
On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 1:21 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 I like Andres' suggestion upthread of setting a deadline and
 determining to bounce the patch if it's not committed by that date.
 If it turns out we have to bounce it, that stinks, but I don't think
 it makes sense to go to beta with a huge, barely-tested pile of code
 in the tree.  Not that the testing Heikki and Fujii Masao have been
 doing until now hasn't been good, but it's not nearly as rigorous as
 what we will get when all of our users start banging on it.

 This argument would hold more water if there weren't *already* a huge,
 barely-tested pile of code in the tree, namely HS.  If you think that's
 anywhere near ready to go to beta, I'm afraid I'd better disillusion
 you immediately.

That may well be so, but adding another one is not going to improve
the situation even a little bit.  I don't think what you're saying
weakens in the slightest the argument that I was making, namely, that
if this isn't committed RSN it should be postponed to 8.6.  Do you
disagree?

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Bruce Momjian
Tom Lane wrote:
 Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
  I like Andres' suggestion upthread of setting a deadline and
  determining to bounce the patch if it's not committed by that date.
  If it turns out we have to bounce it, that stinks, but I don't think
  it makes sense to go to beta with a huge, barely-tested pile of code
  in the tree.  Not that the testing Heikki and Fujii Masao have been
  doing until now hasn't been good, but it's not nearly as rigorous as
  what we will get when all of our users start banging on it.
 
 This argument would hold more water if there weren't *already* a huge,
 barely-tested pile of code in the tree, namely HS.  If you think that's
 anywhere near ready to go to beta, I'm afraid I'd better disillusion
 you immediately.

I agree with Tom's analysis.  HS is very complex, while SR is more
mechanical.  We might find that in the end SR was stable before HS.
I think we should stay on course and see where we are when Heikki is
ready for a commit of SR.

-- 
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  EnterpriseDB http://enterprisedb.com

  + If your life is a hard drive, Christ can be your backup. +

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Tom Lane
Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 That may well be so, but adding another one is not going to improve
 the situation even a little bit.  I don't think what you're saying
 weakens in the slightest the argument that I was making, namely, that
 if this isn't committed RSN it should be postponed to 8.6.  Do you
 disagree?

Well, the argument to my mind is about a suitable value of RSN.
I think you were stating that we should bounce SR if it's not committed
before the final commitfest starts (ie, next week).  I think we can give
it more slack than that.  Maybe the end of the fest (where the length of
the fest is determined by the other open patches)?

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Josh Berkus

 Well, the argument to my mind is about a suitable value of RSN.
 I think you were stating that we should bounce SR if it's not committed
 before the final commitfest starts (ie, next week).  I think we can give
 it more slack than that.  Maybe the end of the fest (where the length of
 the fest is determined by the other open patches)?

Yes.  I think there's tremendous value to PG if we could get HS+SR into
8.5.  And I know that SR is what Heikki is working on exclusively.

If we find that working on SR is causing us not to have time for other
patch review, then we can revisit the decision.

--Josh Berkus

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Robert Haas
On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 2:00 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 That may well be so, but adding another one is not going to improve
 the situation even a little bit.  I don't think what you're saying
 weakens in the slightest the argument that I was making, namely, that
 if this isn't committed RSN it should be postponed to 8.6.  Do you
 disagree?

 Well, the argument to my mind is about a suitable value of RSN.
 I think you were stating that we should bounce SR if it's not committed
 before the final commitfest starts (ie, next week).  I think we can give
 it more slack than that.  Maybe the end of the fest (where the length of
 the fest is determined by the other open patches)?

We did that for 8.4 and I don't think it worked very well.  I think we
should have a HARD cutoff of one month for this CommitFest, just as we
have had for the other ones this cycle.  Anything we can't get through
by February 15th and isn't a release-blocker should just be pushed out
to 8.6.  It is not as if we have a big backlog of patches carried over
from previous CommitFests; we have only two of any size, that I am
aware of: SR and listen/notify.  Anything else that is adversely
affected by this policy is something that was submitted for only the
last CommitFest, and as long as we give those patches a fair review
and good feedback before bouncing them, I don't think we should feel
bad about postponing the ones that are not ready.

If you accept that principle then the question is whether SR should
have a different cut-off than the other patches in the CommitFest.  I
was being a bit coy about my position on that topic in my original
message and I'm still of two minds about it, but your mind-reading is
basically correct.  On the one hand, imposing an earlier deadline
might be viewed as moving the goalposts and I'm generally a big
opponent of that.  On the other hand, assuming that the amount of
community time Heikki gets is independent of what he's working on,
shooting SR through the head sooner means more time to stabilize HS,
which means an earlier release, and since there seems to be a
substantial danger that the release will be late no matter what we do,
I am tempted to say we should clamp down and go into damage control
mode sooner rather than later.

I am really reluctant to go through another cycle of giving a big
feature as much time as humanly possible before bouncing it, and then
bouncing it anyway, and I fear that is what will happen.  I don't
believe this patch has had a major rewrite since it was submitted for
the September CommitFest, and if 4 months hasn't been enough time to
get it committed, then why do we think the magic number is 5 rather
than 6 or 8 or anything else?  If someone has a concrete answer to
that question, I am all ears, but I feel like we're operating mostly
on hope.

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Josh Berkus

 I am really reluctant to go through another cycle of giving a big
 feature as much time as humanly possible before bouncing it, and then
 bouncing it anyway, and I fear that is what will happen.  I don't
 believe this patch has had a major rewrite since it was submitted for
 the September CommitFest, and if 4 months hasn't been enough time to
 get it committed, then why do we think the magic number is 5 rather
 than 6 or 8 or anything else?  If someone has a concrete answer to
 that question, I am all ears, but I feel like we're operating mostly
 on hope.

I think Heikki needs to speak to this.  I know that he's now working
hard on SR, but I have no idea what his timeline is.

--Josh Berkus

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Robert Haas
On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 1:53 PM, Bruce Momjian br...@momjian.us wrote:
 Tom Lane wrote:
 Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
  I like Andres' suggestion upthread of setting a deadline and
  determining to bounce the patch if it's not committed by that date.
  If it turns out we have to bounce it, that stinks, but I don't think
  it makes sense to go to beta with a huge, barely-tested pile of code
  in the tree.  Not that the testing Heikki and Fujii Masao have been
  doing until now hasn't been good, but it's not nearly as rigorous as
  what we will get when all of our users start banging on it.

 This argument would hold more water if there weren't *already* a huge,
 barely-tested pile of code in the tree, namely HS.  If you think that's
 anywhere near ready to go to beta, I'm afraid I'd better disillusion
 you immediately.

 I agree with Tom's analysis.  HS is very complex, while SR is more
 mechanical.  We might find that in the end SR was stable before HS.
 I think we should stay on course and see where we are when Heikki is
 ready for a commit of SR.

I think you're saying that you think we should hold up the 8.5 release
for as long as it takes to get SR committed.  If that's the case, -1
from me.

It also does not seem right to me to suppose that the amount of time
that it will take to stabilize HS is independent of when we give up on
SR.  Surely Heikki, Simon, and Fujii Masao are all key people for both
projects, no?  Tom as well, come to think of it.

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Heikki Linnakangas
Josh Berkus wrote:
 Yes.  I think there's tremendous value to PG if we could get HS+SR into
 8.5.  And I know that SR is what Heikki is working on exclusively.

That hasn't been true for some time, I haven't spent very much time on
SR recently. Not enough, really.

But FWIW I have dedicated today and tomorrow for SR, and plan to
dedicate 2-3 days next week as well.

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread David E. Wheeler
On Jan 7, 2010, at 12:10 PM, Heikki Linnakangas wrote:

 But FWIW I have dedicated today and tomorrow for SR, and plan to
 dedicate 2-3 days next week as well.

Should we then await what you determine over the next week?

Best,

David

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Tom Lane
Greg Sabino Mullane g...@turnstep.com writes:
 However, HS is already in the tree, and HS without SR is a whole lot
 less compelling than HS with SR.  So it's going to be pretty
 unsatisfying if we can't get SR in there.

 I don't think that's the case. Having HS alone would be a huge win,
 and the sooner we can get it out there the better. Those that are
 waiting for SR might have to wait one more version, but my intuition
 tells me that's a small minority compared to those waiting for HS.

No, I don't think so.  HS without SR means you still have to fool with
setting up WAL-file-based replication, which despite the existence of
pg_standby is a PITA.  And you have to make a tradeoff of how often to
flush WAL files to the standby.  To be a real candidate for it just
works replication, we've *got* to have SR.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Magnus Hagander
On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 21:22, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Greg Sabino Mullane g...@turnstep.com writes:
 However, HS is already in the tree, and HS without SR is a whole lot
 less compelling than HS with SR.  So it's going to be pretty
 unsatisfying if we can't get SR in there.

 I don't think that's the case. Having HS alone would be a huge win,
 and the sooner we can get it out there the better. Those that are
 waiting for SR might have to wait one more version, but my intuition
 tells me that's a small minority compared to those waiting for HS.

 No, I don't think so.  HS without SR means you still have to fool with
 setting up WAL-file-based replication, which despite the existence of
 pg_standby is a PITA.  And you have to make a tradeoff of how often to
 flush WAL files to the standby.  To be a real candidate for it just
 works replication, we've *got* to have SR.

Yes, but HS without SR certainly solves all the need to offload my
reporting kind of situations, which is still a very big thing. Yes,
it'll be much nicer with SR, but it will be *very* useful without it
as well.

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Tom Lane
Magnus Hagander mag...@hagander.net writes:
 On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 21:22, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 No, I don't think so.  HS without SR means you still have to fool with
 setting up WAL-file-based replication, which despite the existence of
 pg_standby is a PITA.  And you have to make a tradeoff of how often to
 flush WAL files to the standby.  To be a real candidate for it just
 works replication, we've *got* to have SR.

 Yes, but HS without SR certainly solves all the need to offload my
 reporting kind of situations, which is still a very big thing. Yes,
 it'll be much nicer with SR, but it will be *very* useful without it
 as well.

[ shrug... ]  To me, HS+SR is actual replication, which would justify
tagging this release 9.0.  With only one of them, it's 8.5.  I
understand that there are power users who would find HS alone to be
tremendously useful, but in terms of what the average user sees, there's
a quantum difference.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Tom Lane
Heikki Linnakangas heikki.linnakan...@enterprisedb.com writes:
 Josh Berkus wrote:
 Yes.  I think there's tremendous value to PG if we could get HS+SR into
 8.5.  And I know that SR is what Heikki is working on exclusively.

 That hasn't been true for some time, I haven't spent very much time on
 SR recently. Not enough, really.

 But FWIW I have dedicated today and tomorrow for SR, and plan to
 dedicate 2-3 days next week as well.

So you carefully avoided answering the question: when do you think it
might be committable?

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Tom Lane
Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 I am tempted to say we should clamp down and go into damage control
 mode sooner rather than later.

The more I see of the HS patch, the more I think the same.  But my
proposal for damage control mode would be to immediately punt
everything else to the next release and focus our energies exclusively
on HS *and* SR.  In terms of the big picture for the project, those
are headline items, and everything else is just trivia that the average
user won't even notice.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Andrew Dunstan



Tom Lane wrote:


[ shrug... ]  To me, HS+SR is actual replication, which would justify
tagging this release 9.0.  With only one of them, it's 8.5.  I
understand that there are power users who would find HS alone to be
tremendously useful, but in terms of what the average user sees, there's
a quantum difference.

  


Right. As someone engaged in the marketplace, I can tell you that IMNSHO 
it is almost impossible to overstate the importance of getting both of 
these features. We will suffer an enormous loss of face and respect if 
we don't.


cheers

andrew

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Dave Page
On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 7:00 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 That may well be so, but adding another one is not going to improve
 the situation even a little bit.  I don't think what you're saying
 weakens in the slightest the argument that I was making, namely, that
 if this isn't committed RSN it should be postponed to 8.6.  Do you
 disagree?

 Well, the argument to my mind is about a suitable value of RSN.
 I think you were stating that we should bounce SR if it's not committed
 before the final commitfest starts (ie, next week).  I think we can give
 it more slack than that.  Maybe the end of the fest (where the length of
 the fest is determined by the other open patches)?

Absolutely agree. Stretching the freeze to accomodate SR is what we
should avoid, but bumping it before it's even started is completely
over the top and would be the complete opposite of our past errors.
Especially given that Heikki is spending significant time on it right
now...

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Dave Page
On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 8:36 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 I am tempted to say we should clamp down and go into damage control
 mode sooner rather than later.

 The more I see of the HS patch, the more I think the same.  But my
 proposal for damage control mode would be to immediately punt
 everything else to the next release and focus our energies exclusively
 on HS *and* SR.  In terms of the big picture for the project, those
 are headline items, and everything else is just trivia that the average
 user won't even notice.

100% agree. Whether or not individual users or their clients on this
list need both features, as a project we absolutely need to get them
out there to further boost our reputation as a credible alternative to
Oracle, SQL Server, DB2 and friends - which seem particularly
important to do whilst MySQL is in so much flux and people are
watching us closely.

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Bruce Momjian
Tom Lane wrote:
 Magnus Hagander mag...@hagander.net writes:
  On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 21:22, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
  No, I don't think so. ?HS without SR means you still have to fool with
  setting up WAL-file-based replication, which despite the existence of
  pg_standby is a PITA. ?And you have to make a tradeoff of how often to
  flush WAL files to the standby. ?To be a real candidate for it just
  works replication, we've *got* to have SR.
 
  Yes, but HS without SR certainly solves all the need to offload my
  reporting kind of situations, which is still a very big thing. Yes,
  it'll be much nicer with SR, but it will be *very* useful without it
  as well.
 
 [ shrug... ]  To me, HS+SR is actual replication, which would justify
 tagging this release 9.0.  With only one of them, it's 8.5.  I
 understand that there are power users who would find HS alone to be
 tremendously useful, but in terms of what the average user sees, there's
 a quantum difference.

No question.  We have to think of the average user when considering the
impact of these features, meaning not what _we_ are capable of doing,
but what the average user is capable of easily setting up.

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Devrim GÜNDÜZ
On Thu, 2010-01-07 at 15:49 -0500, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
 Right. As someone engaged in the marketplace, I can tell you that
 IMNSHO  it is almost impossible to overstate the importance of getting
 both of  these features. We will suffer an enormous loss of face and
 respect if we don't. 

+1. That was what I was trying to say.
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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Heikki Linnakangas
Tom Lane wrote:
 Heikki Linnakangas heikki.linnakan...@enterprisedb.com writes:
 But FWIW I have dedicated today and tomorrow for SR, and plan to
 dedicate 2-3 days next week as well.
 
 So you carefully avoided answering the question: when do you think it
 might be committable?

:-). I was hoping to commit it by the end of this week, but I just
bumped into issues with the postmaster state machine is broken. That's
probably going to take tomorrow to clear out. So I'm now thinking next
week. I'm quite familiar with the whole patch, so I'm not expecting to
uncover any new major issues.

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Robert Haas
On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 3:36 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 I am tempted to say we should clamp down and go into damage control
 mode sooner rather than later.

 The more I see of the HS patch, the more I think the same.  But my
 proposal for damage control mode would be to immediately punt
 everything else to the next release and focus our energies exclusively
 on HS *and* SR.  In terms of the big picture for the project, those
 are headline items, and everything else is just trivia that the average
 user won't even notice.

Hmm.  There's something to what you say, but what about the people who
were expecting their patches to be reviewed and perhaps committed in
the forthcoming CommitFest.  I proposed a schedule for this release
that involved only three CommitFests and it was rejected, so it seems
a bit unfair to pull the rug out from under people at the eleventh
hour.  Will we lose developers if we do this?

One thing we can certainly do if we decide to still have the
CommitFest is try to shift more of the committing work from you to
other committers who are not involved in the HS/SR work; I can
volunteer myself.  That would hopefully free you up to spend more time
on HS/SR.  I can also try to handle more of the minor bug-fixes, like
the bit-substring bug.  I couldn't have fixed that as quickly as you
did, but I could have fixed it, and your time is more valuable than
mine.

Unfortunately, there are some patches that I probably will not feel
confident to commit without your input - in particular, writeable
CTEs, listen/notify, more frame options in window functions - and I
venture to say there may not be too many other takers either.  So
we're going to have to confront the question of whether it's fair to
make those people wait a year.  Maybe that is the right decision and
maybe it's not, but I want to make sure we are thinking about our
developer community as well as our user community, because without
them we are dead.

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Tom Lane
Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 3:36 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
 Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 I am tempted to say we should clamp down and go into damage control
 mode sooner rather than later.
 
 The more I see of the HS patch, the more I think the same.  But my
 proposal for damage control mode would be to immediately punt
 everything else to the next release and focus our energies exclusively
 on HS *and* SR.

 Hmm.  There's something to what you say, but what about the people who
 were expecting their patches to be reviewed and perhaps committed in
 the forthcoming CommitFest.  I proposed a schedule for this release
 that involved only three CommitFests and it was rejected, so it seems
 a bit unfair to pull the rug out from under people at the eleventh
 hour.  Will we lose developers if we do this?

Well, I think we should put at least some effort into clearing out
the underbrush.  There's a lot of pretty small stuff in the January CF
list that I think we could go through in a short time.  The biggies,
IMO, are the ones you noted:

 Unfortunately, there are some patches that I probably will not feel
 confident to commit without your input - in particular, writeable
 CTEs, listen/notify, more frame options in window functions -

and Teodor's GIN/GIST stuff.  If we feel that we are in schedule
trouble I think that bumping these to the next release is by far
the sanest response.  Bumping SR so we can get these in would be
completely misguided.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Dimitri Fontaine
Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
 Hmm.  There's something to what you say, but what about the people who
 were expecting their patches to be reviewed and perhaps committed in
 the forthcoming CommitFest.  I proposed a schedule for this release
 that involved only three CommitFests and it was rejected, so it seems
 a bit unfair to pull the rug out from under people at the eleventh
 hour.  Will we lose developers if we do this?

Well the RRR people will not be able to help much with SR, will we?

So I'm not sure about what you say, but running the commitfest as usual
seems entirely feasible while continuing the efforts on SR. Now, only
the last action item of the commitfest is to be spoken of, namely the
one we always struggle with: finding commiter time to finish up the
work. I guess the 4 new commiters will help, even if I guess Simon will
be exclusively focused on HS+SR issues and review.

 Unfortunately, there are some patches that I probably will not feel
 confident to commit without your input - in particular, writeable
 CTEs, listen/notify, more frame options in window functions - and I
 venture to say there may not be too many other takers either.  So
 we're going to have to confront the question of whether it's fair to
 make those people wait a year.  Maybe that is the right decision and
 maybe it's not, but I want to make sure we are thinking about our
 developer community as well as our user community, because without
 them we are dead.

What about asking for input from authors themselves? Like would you be
really upset if we had SR in 8.5, surely meaning lots of new users (and
development contract opportunities), at the cost of not being able to
properly review your work and postponing it to 8.6?

That's a hard attitude, but it's not clear for me how to avoid it, and
if as a project there's a better way to face the issue. I've been bitten
with cultural issues before, so if you find this utterly harsh to the
point of being shoked, please accept my excuses, I'm not able to propose
something better on the practical front.

Regards,
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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Dimitri Fontaine
Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us writes:
 No, I don't think so.  HS without SR means you still have to fool with
 setting up WAL-file-based replication, which despite the existence of
 pg_standby is a PITA.  And you have to make a tradeoff of how often to
 flush WAL files to the standby.  To be a real candidate for it just
 works replication, we've *got* to have SR.

There are also walmgr.py from Skytools and pitrtools from CMD, both of
them are simpler to install and get working. In my view the big ticket
with SR would be the synchronous part for full HA setup, without that I
guess walmgr+HS is plenty good enough. But as a project that still means
having to get an external piece of software to operate replication, so
that's still not PostgreSQL 8.5 comes with replication support.

Regards,
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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread David Fetter
On Thu, Jan 07, 2010 at 03:32:28PM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
 Magnus Hagander mag...@hagander.net writes:
  On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 21:22, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
  No, I don't think so. �HS without SR means you still have to fool
  with setting up WAL-file-based replication, which despite the
  existence of pg_standby is a PITA. �And you have to make a
  tradeoff of how often to flush WAL files to the standby. �To be a
  real candidate for it just works replication, we've *got* to
  have SR.
 
  Yes, but HS without SR certainly solves all the need to offload
  my reporting kind of situations, which is still a very big thing.
  Yes, it'll be much nicer with SR, but it will be *very* useful
  without it as well.
 
 [ shrug... ]  To me, HS+SR is actual replication, which would
 justify tagging this release 9.0.  With only one of them, it's 8.5.
 I understand that there are power users who would find HS alone to
 be tremendously useful, but in terms of what the average user sees,
 there's a quantum difference.

By, quantum, do you mean, the smallest possible?

Cheers,
David.
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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-07 Thread Stefan Kaltenbrunner

Greg Sabino Mullane wrote:

-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: RIPEMD160



while I agree that HS is very useful without SR, I think that it's
mostly the well known powerusers inthe community are actively waiting
for HS and not so much for SR. For the typical user outside of -hackers
or even -general I'm not so sure about that...


Well, I can state that we have plenty of clients that would be very
interested in HS, but none that would really care if it came without
SR. This power user knows a lot of people outside of -hackers and
- -general and they are what I'm basing my opinion on. :)


that is more or less my point but maybe I phrased it badly :) Real 
database powerusers are mostly interested in HS. THe people that are 
coming from a different background or maybe MySQL are likely going to 
find something that requires doing a base backup, implementing wal 
shipping and installing pg_standby(or some other custom scripts) akward...



Stefan

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-06 Thread Heikki Linnakangas
Fujii Masao wrote:
 I've done that in my git branch.
 
 Could you push that git branch to a public place?

Ahh, sorry, forgot that again. It's there now, at
git://git.postgresql.org/git/users/heikki/postgres.git, branch
'replication'.

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-06 Thread Craig Ringer
Fujii Masao wrote:
 On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 11:29 PM, Alvaro Herrera
 alvhe...@commandprompt.com wrote:
 This was probably discussed to death earlier, but: why was it decided to
 not simply use a different port for listening for walsender
 connections?
 
 I believe that using a different port would make the setup
 of replication messier; look for the unused port number,
 open that port for replication in the firewall, etc.

Actually, being able to firewall walsender traffic separately might be
rather handy.

Having to assign a different port wouldn't be fun for packagers, though,
especially those (like the Debian-derived Linux distros) who already try
to support more than one Pg version installed in parallel.

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-06 Thread Tom Lane
Craig Ringer cr...@postnewspapers.com.au writes:
 Fujii Masao wrote:
 On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 11:29 PM, Alvaro Herrera
 alvhe...@commandprompt.com wrote:
 This was probably discussed to death earlier, but: why was it decided to
 not simply use a different port for listening for walsender
 connections?
 
 I believe that using a different port would make the setup
 of replication messier; look for the unused port number,
 open that port for replication in the firewall, etc.

 Actually, being able to firewall walsender traffic separately might be
 rather handy.

 Having to assign a different port wouldn't be fun for packagers, though,

Well, we'd have to get a port number officially assigned by IANA.

I tend to agree that the management overhead of a second port isn't
worth it.

regards, tom lane

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[HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-05 Thread Heikki Linnakangas
Looking at the latest streaming replication patch, I don't much like the
signaling between WAL sender and postmaster. It seems complicated, and
as a rule of thumb postmaster shouldn't be accessing shared memory. The
current signaling is:

1. A new connection arrives. A new backend process is forked forked like
for a normal connection.
2. When the new process is done with the initialization, it allocates
itself a slot from WalSndCtlData shared memory array. It marks its pid
there, sets registered = false, and signals postmaster with
PMSIGNAL_REGISTER_WALSENDER
3. Upon receiving that signal, postmaster scans the WalSndCtlData array
looking for entries with registered==false. For such entries, it scans
the postmaster-private backend list for a matching entry with the same
pid, marks the entry in the list as a walsender, and sets
registered=true in the shared memory entry.

This way postmaster knows which child processes are walsenders, when
it's time to signal them.

I think it would be better to utilize the existing array of child
processes in pmsignal.c. Instead of having postmaster peek into
WalSndCtlData, let's add a new state to PMChildFlags,
PM_CHILD_WALSENDER, which is just like PM_CHILD_ACTIVE but tells
postmaster that the child is not a normal backend but a walsender.

I've done that in my git branch.

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-05 Thread Alvaro Herrera
Heikki Linnakangas escribió:
 Looking at the latest streaming replication patch, I don't much like the
 signaling between WAL sender and postmaster. It seems complicated, and
 as a rule of thumb postmaster shouldn't be accessing shared memory. The
 current signaling is:
 
 1. A new connection arrives. A new backend process is forked forked like
 for a normal connection.

This was probably discussed to death earlier, but: why was it decided to
not simply use a different port for listening for walsender
connections?


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Alvaro Herrerahttp://www.CommandPrompt.com/
The PostgreSQL Company - Command Prompt, Inc.

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-05 Thread Fujii Masao
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 11:07 PM, Heikki Linnakangas
heikki.linnakan...@enterprisedb.com wrote:
 I think it would be better to utilize the existing array of child
 processes in pmsignal.c. Instead of having postmaster peek into
 WalSndCtlData, let's add a new state to PMChildFlags,
 PM_CHILD_WALSENDER, which is just like PM_CHILD_ACTIVE but tells
 postmaster that the child is not a normal backend but a walsender.

Seems good.

 I've done that in my git branch.

Could you push that git branch to a public place?

Regards,

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Fujii Masao
NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
NTT Open Source Software Center

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Re: [HACKERS] Streaming replication and postmaster signaling

2010-01-05 Thread Fujii Masao
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 11:29 PM, Alvaro Herrera
alvhe...@commandprompt.com wrote:
 This was probably discussed to death earlier, but: why was it decided to
 not simply use a different port for listening for walsender
 connections?

I believe that using a different port would make the setup
of replication messier; look for the unused port number,
open that port for replication in the firewall, etc.

Regards,

-- 
Fujii Masao
NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
NTT Open Source Software Center

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