Thread

Commits

  1. Make GUC wal_sender_timeout user-settable

  1. Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Tsunakawa, Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com> — 2018-09-13T01:14:12Z

    Hello,
    
    What do you think about changing wal_sender_timeout from PGC_HUP to PGC_BACKEND or PGC_USERSET?
    
    Some customer wants to change the setting per standby, i.e., a shorter timeout for a standby in the same region to enable faster detection failure and failover, and a longer timeout for a standby in the remote region (for disaster recovery) to avoid mis-judging its health.
    
    The current PGC_HUP allows to change the setting by editing postgresql.conf or ALTER SYSTEM and then sending SIGHUP to a specific walsender.  But that's not easy to use.  The user has to do it upon every switchover and failover.
    
    With PGC_BACKEND, the user would be able to tune the timeout as follows:
    
    [recovery.conf]
    primary_conninfo = '... options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=60000'' ...'
    
    With PGC_USERSET, the user would be able to use different user accounts for each standby, and tune the setting as follows:
    
    ALTER USER repluser_remote SET wal_sender_timeout = 60000;
    
    
    FYI
    In Oracle Data Guard, the user configures the timeout for each standby in the primary server's configuration file like this:
    
    LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_1 = "SERVICE=local_conn_info SYNC NET_TIMEOUT=5"
    LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_2 = "SERVICE=remote_conn_info ASYNC NET_TIMEOUT=60"
    
    
    Regards
    Takayuki Tsunakawa
    
    
    
    
    
  2. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2018-09-13T03:32:30Z

    On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 01:14:12AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    > Some customer wants to change the setting per standby, i.e., a shorter
    > timeout for a standby in the same region to enable faster detection
    > failure and failover, and a longer timeout for a standby in the remote
    > region (for disaster recovery) to avoid mis-judging its health.
    
    This argument is sensible.
    
    > The current PGC_HUP allows to change the setting by editing
    > postgresql.conf or ALTER SYSTEM and then sending SIGHUP to a specific
    > walsender.  But that's not easy to use.  The user has to do it upon
    > every switchover and failover. 
    > 
    > With PGC_BACKEND, the user would be able to tune the timeout as follows:
    > 
    > [recovery.conf]
    > primary_conninfo = '... options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=60000'' ...'
    > 
    > With PGC_USERSET, the user would be able to use different user
    > accounts for each standby, and tune the setting as follows: 
    > 
    > ALTER USER repluser_remote SET wal_sender_timeout = 60000;
    
    It seems to me that switching to PGC_BACKENDwould cover already all the
    use-cases you are mentioning, as at the end one would just want to
    adjust the WAL sender timeout on a connection basis depending on the
    geographical location of the receiver and the latency between primary
    and standby.
    --
    Michael
    
  3. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2018-09-14T09:22:33Z

    On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 12:32 PM, Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    > On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 01:14:12AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    >> Some customer wants to change the setting per standby, i.e., a shorter
    >> timeout for a standby in the same region to enable faster detection
    >> failure and failover, and a longer timeout for a standby in the remote
    >> region (for disaster recovery) to avoid mis-judging its health.
    >
    > This argument is sensible.
    >
    >> The current PGC_HUP allows to change the setting by editing
    >> postgresql.conf or ALTER SYSTEM and then sending SIGHUP to a specific
    >> walsender.  But that's not easy to use.  The user has to do it upon
    >> every switchover and failover.
    >>
    >> With PGC_BACKEND, the user would be able to tune the timeout as follows:
    >>
    >> [recovery.conf]
    >> primary_conninfo = '... options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=60000'' ...'
    >>
    >> With PGC_USERSET, the user would be able to use different user
    >> accounts for each standby, and tune the setting as follows:
    >>
    >> ALTER USER repluser_remote SET wal_sender_timeout = 60000;
    >
    > It seems to me that switching to PGC_BACKENDwould cover already all the
    > use-cases you are mentioning, as at the end one would just want to
    > adjust the WAL sender timeout on a connection basis depending on the
    > geographical location of the receiver and the latency between primary
    > and standby.
    
    +1 for PGC_BACKEND. It looks enough for most use cases.
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
  4. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2018-09-18T02:20:03Z

    At Fri, 14 Sep 2018 18:22:33 +0900, Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote in <CAD21AoBr2Y=N4iH8+6m5ara2GWdKE6ZrzWaqjZux6ErZ9pyAxQ@mail.gmail.com>
    > On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 12:32 PM, Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    > > On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 01:14:12AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    > >> Some customer wants to change the setting per standby, i.e., a shorter
    > >> timeout for a standby in the same region to enable faster detection
    > >> failure and failover, and a longer timeout for a standby in the remote
    > >> region (for disaster recovery) to avoid mis-judging its health.
    > >
    > > This argument is sensible.
    > >
    > >> The current PGC_HUP allows to change the setting by editing
    > >> postgresql.conf or ALTER SYSTEM and then sending SIGHUP to a specific
    > >> walsender.  But that's not easy to use.  The user has to do it upon
    > >> every switchover and failover.
    > >>
    > >> With PGC_BACKEND, the user would be able to tune the timeout as follows:
    > >>
    > >> [recovery.conf]
    > >> primary_conninfo = '... options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=60000'' ...'
    > >>
    > >> With PGC_USERSET, the user would be able to use different user
    > >> accounts for each standby, and tune the setting as follows:
    > >>
    > >> ALTER USER repluser_remote SET wal_sender_timeout = 60000;
    > >
    > > It seems to me that switching to PGC_BACKENDwould cover already all the
    > > use-cases you are mentioning, as at the end one would just want to
    > > adjust the WAL sender timeout on a connection basis depending on the
    > > geographical location of the receiver and the latency between primary
    > > and standby.
    > 
    > +1 for PGC_BACKEND. It looks enough for most use cases.
    
    +1, and we need a means to see the actual value, in
    pg_stat_replication?
    
    regards.
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  5. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2018-09-18T02:47:58Z

    On Tue, Sep 18, 2018 at 11:20:03AM +0900, Kyotaro HORIGUCHI wrote:
    > +1, and we need a means to see the actual value, in
    > pg_stat_replication?
    
    Well, being able to see what another session is using as settings is
    not a trivial problem, perhaps not worth solving, and orthogonal to
    what's discussed here...
    --
    Michael
    
  6. RE: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Tsunakawa, Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com> — 2018-09-18T08:27:16Z

    From: Kyotaro HORIGUCHI [mailto:horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp]
    > At Fri, 14 Sep 2018 18:22:33 +0900, Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
    > wrote in
    > <CAD21AoBr2Y=N4iH8+6m5ara2GWdKE6ZrzWaqjZux6ErZ9pyAxQ@mail.gmail.com>
    > > On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 12:32 PM, Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
    > wrote:
    > > > On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 01:14:12AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    > > >> Some customer wants to change the setting per standby, i.e., a shorter
    > > >> timeout for a standby in the same region to enable faster detection
    > > >> failure and failover, and a longer timeout for a standby in the remote
    > > >> region (for disaster recovery) to avoid mis-judging its health.
    > > >
    > > > This argument is sensible.
    > > >
    > > >> The current PGC_HUP allows to change the setting by editing
    > > >> postgresql.conf or ALTER SYSTEM and then sending SIGHUP to a specific
    > > >> walsender.  But that's not easy to use.  The user has to do it upon
    > > >> every switchover and failover.
    > > >>
    > > >> With PGC_BACKEND, the user would be able to tune the timeout as follows:
    > > >>
    > > >> [recovery.conf]
    > > >> primary_conninfo = '... options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=60000'' ...'
    > > >>
    > > >> With PGC_USERSET, the user would be able to use different user
    > > >> accounts for each standby, and tune the setting as follows:
    > > >>
    > > >> ALTER USER repluser_remote SET wal_sender_timeout = 60000;
    > > >
    > > > It seems to me that switching to PGC_BACKENDwould cover already all
    > the
    > > > use-cases you are mentioning, as at the end one would just want to
    > > > adjust the WAL sender timeout on a connection basis depending on the
    > > > geographical location of the receiver and the latency between primary
    > > > and standby.
    > >
    > > +1 for PGC_BACKEND. It looks enough for most use cases.
    > 
    > +1, and we need a means to see the actual value, in
    > pg_stat_replication?
    
    Thanks, the patch attached.  I'll add this to the next CF shortly.  As Michael said, I think viewing the configured value would be a separate feature.
    
    
    Regards
    Takayuki Tsunakawa
    
    
    
  7. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2018-09-18T11:35:26Z

    On Tue, Sep 18, 2018 at 5:27 PM, Tsunakawa, Takayuki
    <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com> wrote:
    > From: Kyotaro HORIGUCHI [mailto:horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp]
    >> At Fri, 14 Sep 2018 18:22:33 +0900, Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
    >> wrote in
    >> <CAD21AoBr2Y=N4iH8+6m5ara2GWdKE6ZrzWaqjZux6ErZ9pyAxQ@mail.gmail.com>
    >> > On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 12:32 PM, Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
    >> wrote:
    >> > > On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 01:14:12AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    >> > >> Some customer wants to change the setting per standby, i.e., a shorter
    >> > >> timeout for a standby in the same region to enable faster detection
    >> > >> failure and failover, and a longer timeout for a standby in the remote
    >> > >> region (for disaster recovery) to avoid mis-judging its health.
    >> > >
    >> > > This argument is sensible.
    >> > >
    >> > >> The current PGC_HUP allows to change the setting by editing
    >> > >> postgresql.conf or ALTER SYSTEM and then sending SIGHUP to a specific
    >> > >> walsender.  But that's not easy to use.  The user has to do it upon
    >> > >> every switchover and failover.
    >> > >>
    >> > >> With PGC_BACKEND, the user would be able to tune the timeout as follows:
    >> > >>
    >> > >> [recovery.conf]
    >> > >> primary_conninfo = '... options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=60000'' ...'
    >> > >>
    >> > >> With PGC_USERSET, the user would be able to use different user
    >> > >> accounts for each standby, and tune the setting as follows:
    >> > >>
    >> > >> ALTER USER repluser_remote SET wal_sender_timeout = 60000;
    >> > >
    >> > > It seems to me that switching to PGC_BACKENDwould cover already all
    >> the
    >> > > use-cases you are mentioning, as at the end one would just want to
    >> > > adjust the WAL sender timeout on a connection basis depending on the
    >> > > geographical location of the receiver and the latency between primary
    >> > > and standby.
    >> >
    >> > +1 for PGC_BACKEND. It looks enough for most use cases.
    >>
    >> +1, and we need a means to see the actual value, in
    >> pg_stat_replication?
    >
    > Thanks, the patch attached.  I'll add this to the next CF shortly.  As Michael said, I think viewing the configured value would be a separate feature.
    >
    
    Thank you for the patch.
    
    +       <tip>
    +        <para>
    +         The <literal>%q</literal> escape is useful when including
    information that is
    +         You can also set this in recovery.conf as follows.  This
    allows you to set a
    +         longer timeout for a standby in the remote data center
    across the slow WAN.
    +<programlisting>
    +primary_conninfo = 'host=192.168.1.50 port=5432 user=foo
    password=foopass options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=5000'''
    +</programlisting>
    +        </para>
    +       </tip>
    
    I didn't follow the first sentence of the above hunk. Is the
    wal_sender_timeout relevant with %q?
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
  8. RE: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Tsunakawa, Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com> — 2018-09-19T00:14:57Z

    From: Masahiko Sawada [mailto:sawada.mshk@gmail.com]
    > I didn't follow the first sentence of the above hunk. Is the
    > wal_sender_timeout relevant with %q?
    
    Ouch, that's a careless mistake.  I copied the paragraph from another parameter and failed to remove some sentence.  Patch revised.
    
    Regards
    Takayuki Tsunakawa
    
    
    
  9. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2018-09-19T05:40:31Z

    On Wed, Sep 19, 2018 at 12:14:57AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    > From: Masahiko Sawada [mailto:sawada.mshk@gmail.com]
    > > I didn't follow the first sentence of the above hunk. Is the
    > > wal_sender_timeout relevant with %q?
    > 
    > Ouch, that's a careless mistake.  I copied the paragraph from another
    > parameter and failed to remove some sentence.  Patch revised.
    
    -        A value of zero disables the timeout mechanism.  This parameter
    -        can only be set in
    -        the <filename>postgresql.conf</filename> file or on the server
    -        command line.
    +        A value of zero disables the timeout mechanism.
    +        Only superusers can change this parameter at session start,
    +        and it cannot be changed at all within a session.
             The default value is 60 seconds.
    
    Parameters classified as PGC_BACKEND can be updated by any users, and
    those marked as PGC_SU_BACKEND can only be updated by superusers.
    Replication users are not superusers, which is why PGC_BACKEND is most
    adapted.  Your description should just say "This parameter cannot be
    changed after session start.
    --
    Michael
    
  10. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2018-09-19T06:13:03Z

    On Wed, Sep 19, 2018 at 02:40:31PM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
    > Parameters classified as PGC_BACKEND can be updated by any users, and
    > those marked as PGC_SU_BACKEND can only be updated by superusers.
    > Replication users are not superusers, which is why PGC_BACKEND is most
    > adapted.  Your description should just say "This parameter cannot be
    > changed after session start.
    
    Actually, now that I look at guc.c, using PGC_BACKEND breaks one case:
    such parameter types cannot be changed even with SIGHUP, and this even
    if the session relies on the default value.  So you could break
    applications relying on reloads.  PGC_USERSET would actually do the work
    as if the session uses a non-default value specified by SET or within
    the connection string, then SIGHUP updates have no effect.  On the
    contrary, if the client relies on the default value, then SIGHUP updates
    take effect.  Sorry for the confusion, I should have looked at guc.c
    more carefully.
    --
    Michael
    
  11. RE: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Tsunakawa, Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com> — 2018-09-19T06:21:52Z

    From: Michael Paquier [mailto:michael@paquier.xyz]
    > Parameters classified as PGC_BACKEND can be updated by any users, and those
    > marked as PGC_SU_BACKEND can only be updated by superusers.
    > Replication users are not superusers, which is why PGC_BACKEND is most
    > adapted.  Your description should just say "This parameter cannot be
    > changed after session start.
    
    How embarrassing...  I'm sorry to cause you trouble to point out a silly mistake like this (I thought I would write as you suggested, but it seems that I was not who I usually am.)  The revised patch attached.
    
    
    Regards
    Takayuki Tsunakawa
    
    
    
    
  12. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2018-09-20T23:51:55Z

    On Wed, Sep 19, 2018 at 06:21:52AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    > How embarrassing...  I'm sorry to cause you trouble to point out a
    > silly mistake like this (I thought I would write as you suggested, but
    > it seems that I was not who I usually am.)  The revised patch
    > attached. 
    
    Thanks for the new version.  Per my comments up-thread here, you cannot
    actually use PGC_BACKEND:
    https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20180919061303.GB19808@paquier.xyz
    
    This would break the case where this parameter is reloaded when a
    session does not use a custom value for wal_sender_timeout.  I have also
    looked at all the code paths using wal_sender_timeout, and the change
    looks safe to me.  Please find attached an update, simplified, version.
    Does that look fine to you?
    --
    Michael
    
  13. RE: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Tsunakawa, Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com> — 2018-09-21T02:28:07Z

    From: Michael Paquier [mailto:michael@paquier.xyz]
    > Thanks for the new version.  Per my comments up-thread here, you cannot
    > actually use PGC_BACKEND:
    > https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20180919061303.GB19808@paquier.x
    > yz
    > 
    > This would break the case where this parameter is reloaded when a session
    > does not use a custom value for wal_sender_timeout.  I have also looked
    > at all the code paths using wal_sender_timeout, and the change looks safe
    > to me.  Please find attached an update, simplified, version.
    > Does that look fine to you?
    
    Thank you, PGC_USERSET is off course fine to me.  I thought PGC_BACKEND includes the capability of PGC_SIGHUP, because PGC_BACKEND is placed after PGC_SIGHUP in the definition of enum GucContext.  That was a pitfall.  I should have paid more attention.
    
    I find it more user friendly to include a description somewhere that the user can tune the timeout per standby, like I added a tip in the description of wal_sender_timeout.  I'm afraid users won't know whether and how to tune the setting per standby, as libpq's options parameter doesn't seem well-known in my experience.
    
    
    Regards
    Takayuki Tsunakawa
    
    
    
    
    
    
  14. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2018-09-21T04:42:01Z

    On Fri, Sep 21, 2018 at 02:28:07AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    > I find it more user friendly to include a description somewhere that
    > the user can tune the timeout per standby, like I added a tip in the
    > description of wal_sender_timeout.  I'm afraid users won't know
    > whether and how to tune the setting per standby, as libpq's options
    > parameter doesn't seem well-known in my experience. 
    
    But that does not apply to this single parameter, no?  I would think
    that a section in recovery.conf is more adapted.  I can see that the
    patch I proposed up-thread could be more precise though, so why not
    adding at an extra paragraph?  Here is an idea:
    "For a cluster distributed across multiple geographic locations, using
    a different value per location brings more flexibility in the cluster
    management.  A smaller value is useful for faster failure detection with
    a standby having a low connection latency, and a larger value helps in
    judging better the health of a standby if located in a remote location,
    with a longer connection latency."
    --
    Michael
    
  15. RE: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Tsunakawa, Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com> — 2018-09-21T05:37:42Z

    From: Michael Paquier [mailto:michael@paquier.xyz]
    > But that does not apply to this single parameter, no?  I would think that
    > a section in recovery.conf is more adapted.  I can see that the patch I
    > proposed up-thread could be more precise though, so why not adding at an
    > extra paragraph?  Here is an idea:
    > "For a cluster distributed across multiple geographic locations, using a
    > different value per location brings more flexibility in the cluster
    > management.  A smaller value is useful for faster failure detection with
    > a standby having a low connection latency, and a larger value helps
    > judging better the health of a standby if located in a remote location,
    > with a longer connection latency."
    
    That paragraph looks cool, thanks.  Regarding where the paragraph should be, there are three candidate locations:
    
    (1) 19.6.1. Sending Servers, wal_sender_timeout description
    https://www.postgresql.org/docs/devel/static/runtime-config-replication.html#RUNTIME-CONFIG-REPLICATION-SENDER
    
    (2) 26.2.4. Setting Up a Standby Server
    https://www.postgresql.org/docs/devel/static/warm-standby.html#STANDBY-SERVER-SETUP
    
    (3) 27.3. Standby Server Settings, primary_conninfo description
    https://www.postgresql.org/docs/devel/static/standby-settings.html
    
    I think all of these are almost equally good.  I chose (1) at first, and you chose (3).  But (2) may be the best, because it's the natural place the user will see when configuring the standby, and it already contains an example of recovery.conf.  We can add "options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=5000''" or something in that example.  I'm OK with anyplace, but I recommend adding how to specify wal_sender_timeout in primary_conninfo, because libpq's options parameter may not be well-konown, and it's a bit difficult to figure out the need to enclose the value with double single-quotes.
    
    
    Regards
    Takayuki Tsunakawa
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
  16. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2018-09-21T06:01:33Z

    On Fri, Sep 21, 2018 at 05:37:42AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    > I think all of these are almost equally good.  I chose (1) at first,
    > and you chose (3).  But (2) may be the best, because it's the natural
    > place the user will see when configuring the standby, and it already
    > contains an example of recovery.conf.  We can add "options=''-c
    > wal_sender_timeout=5000''" or something in that example.  I'm OK with
    > anyplace, but I recommend adding how to specify wal_sender_timeout in
    > primary_conninfo, because libpq's options parameter may not be
    > well-konown, and it's a bit difficult to figure out the need to
    > enclose the value with double single-quotes. 
    
    I think that the description of wal_sender_timeout and its properties
    should remain where the parameter is defined, so (3) is not a good
    option in my opinion.  (2) has a point with the use of quotes actually,
    so why not just mention options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=5000'' in the
    example of recovery.conf as you suggest and call it a day, but keep the
    paragraph I suggested in (1)?
    --
    Michael
    
  17. RE: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Tsunakawa, Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com> — 2018-09-21T06:26:19Z

    From: Michael Paquier [mailto:michael@paquier.xyz]
    > I think that the description of wal_sender_timeout and its properties should
    > remain where the parameter is defined, so (3) is not a good option in my
    > opinion.  (2) has a point with the use of quotes actually, so why not just
    > mention options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=5000'' in the example of
    > recovery.conf as you suggest and call it a day, but keep the paragraph I
    > suggested in (1)?
    
    Agreed.  Sorry to cause you to take this long time for such a tiny patch...
    
    
    Regards
    Takayuki Tsunakawa
    
    
    
    
    
  18. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2018-09-21T08:51:14Z

    On Fri, Sep 21, 2018 at 06:26:19AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    > Agreed.  Sorry to cause you to take this long time for such a tiny
    > patch...
    
    Well, that is arguing about how to shape things and agree on those,
    which is not wasted time, far from that.
    --
    Michael
    
  19. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2018-09-22T06:27:24Z

    On Fri, Sep 21, 2018 at 06:26:19AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    > Agreed.
    
    Okay, I have pushed the patch with all your suggestions included.
    --
    Michael
    
  20. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2018-09-23T04:09:38Z

    Hi,
    
    On 2018-09-22 15:27:24 +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
    > On Fri, Sep 21, 2018 at 06:26:19AM +0000, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote:
    > > Agreed.
    > 
    > Okay, I have pushed the patch with all your suggestions included.
    
    Have there been discussions about the security effects of this change?
    Previously the server admin could control the timeout, which could
    affect things like syncrep, after this it's not possible anymore.  I
    *think* that's ok, but it should be discussed.
    
    Greetings,
    
    Andres Freund
    
    
    
  21. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-09-23T14:47:44Z

    Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> writes:
    > Have there been discussions about the security effects of this change?
    > Previously the server admin could control the timeout, which could
    > affect things like syncrep, after this it's not possible anymore.  I
    > *think* that's ok, but it should be discussed.
    
    Hm.  An evil replication connection could already cause all sorts of
    operational problems (and I'm not counting grabbing all your data).
    Does this add anything much new in that line?  It seems like the
    effects would be at least in the same ballpark as not sending
    hot-standby-feedback messages in a timely fashion.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
  22. Re: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2018-09-23T22:40:47Z

    On Sun, Sep 23, 2018 at 10:47:44AM -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
    > Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> writes:
    >> Have there been discussions about the security effects of this change?
    >> Previously the server admin could control the timeout, which could
    >> affect things like syncrep, after this it's not possible anymore.  I
    >> *think* that's ok, but it should be discussed.
    > 
    > Hm.  An evil replication connection could already cause all sorts of
    > operational problems (and I'm not counting grabbing all your data).
    > Does this add anything much new in that line?  It seems like the
    > effects would be at least in the same ballpark as not sending
    > hot-standby-feedback messages in a timely fashion.
    
    Well, a user able to spawn a WAL sender has replication rights, and it
    is already entrusted a lot, particularly knowing that this user can run
    BASE_BACKUP and fetch a superuser password which could be used for more
    evil actions.  So I am not sure what is actually worrying with this
    change in this area, at least it seems to me that the bar is not really
    lowered.  An admin can still enforce a value if the client does not
    specify it at connection time.  What kind of attack would you see?  An
    evil user connecting with a insanely high value and delaying failure
    detection, impacting the system performance?
    --
    Michael
    
  23. RE: Changing the setting of wal_sender_timeout per standby

    Tsunakawa, Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com> — 2018-09-25T02:03:51Z

    From: Michael Paquier [mailto:michael@paquier.xyz]
    > Okay, I have pushed the patch with all your suggestions included.
    
    Thanks so much!
    
    Regards
    Takayuki Tsunakawa