Thread

  1. Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2012-06-08T08:22:01Z

    Hello,
    
    I have a problem with promoting from hot-standby that exclusive
    checkpointing retards completion of promotion.
    
    This checkpoint is "shutdown checkpoint" as a convention in
    realtion to TLI increment according to the comment shown below. I
    suppose "shutdown checkpoint" means exclusive checkpoint - in
    other words, checkpoint without WAL inserts meanwhile.
    
    >      * one. This is not particularly critical, but since we may be
    >      * assigning a new TLI, using a shutdown checkpoint allows us to have
    >      * the rule that TLI only changes in shutdown checkpoints, which
    >      * allows some extra error checking in xlog_redo.
    
    I depend on this and suppose we can omit it if latest checkpoint
    has been taken so as to be able to do crash recovery thereafter.
    This condition could be secured by my another patch for
    checkpoint_segments on standby.
    
    After applying this patch, checkpoint after archive recovery at
    near the end of StartupXLOG() will be skiped on the condition
    follows,
    
    - WAL receiver has been launched so far. (using WalRcvStarted())
    
    - XLogCheckpointNeeded() against replayEndRecPtr says no need of
      checkpoint.
    
    What do you think about this?
    
    
    This patch needs WalRcvStarted() introduced by my another patch.
    
    http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2012-06/msg00287.php
    
    regards,
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    == My e-mail address has been changed since Apr. 1, 2012.
    
  2. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> — 2012-06-08T09:28:12Z

    On 8 June 2012 09:22, Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> wrote:
    
    > I have a problem with promoting from hot-standby that exclusive
    > checkpointing retards completion of promotion.
    
    Agreed, we have that problem.
    
    > I depend on this and suppose we can omit it if latest checkpoint
    > has been taken so as to be able to do crash recovery thereafter.
    
    I don't see any reason to special case this. If a checkpoint has no
    work to do, then it will go very quickly. Why seek to speed it up even
    further?
    
    > This condition could be secured by my another patch for
    > checkpoint_segments on standby.
    
    More frequent checkpoints are very unlikely to secure a condition that
    no checkpoint at all is required at failover.
    
    Making a change that has a negative effect for everybody, in the hope
    of sometimes improving performance for something that is already fast
    doesn't seem a good trade off to me.
    
    Regrettably, the line of thought explained here does not seem useful to me.
    
    As you know, I was working on avoiding shutdown checkpoints completely
    myself. You are welcome to work on the approach Fujii and I discussed.
    
    -- 
     Simon Riggs                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
  3. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2012-06-12T02:38:31Z

    Hello, sorry for vague understanding.
    
    > > I depend on this and suppose we can omit it if latest checkpoint
    > > has been taken so as to be able to do crash recovery thereafter.
    > 
    > I don't see any reason to special case this. If a checkpoint has no
    > work to do, then it will go very quickly. Why seek to speed it up even
    > further?
    
    I want the standby to start to serve as soon as possible even by
    a few seconds on failover in a HA cluster.
    
    > > This condition could be secured by my another patch for
    > > checkpoint_segments on standby.
    > 
    > More frequent checkpoints are very unlikely to secure a condition that
    > no checkpoint at all is required at failover.
    
    I understand that checkpoint at the end of recovery is
    indispensable to ensure the availability of crash recovery
    afterward. Putting aside the convention about TLI increment and
    shutdown checkpoint, shutdown checkpoints there seems for me to
    be omittable if (and not 'only if', I suppose) crash recovery is
    available at the time.
    
    Shutdown checkpoint itself seems dispansable to me, but I'm
    shamingly not convinced so taking the TLI convention into
    consideration.
    
    
    > Making a change that has a negative effect for everybody, in the hope
    > of sometimes improving performance for something that is already fast
    > doesn't seem a good trade off to me.
    
    Hmm.. I suppose the negative effect you've pointed is possible
    slowing down of hot-standby by the extra checkpoints being
    discussed in another thread, is it correct? Could you accept this
    kind of modification if it could be turned off by, say, GUC?
    
    > Regrettably, the line of thought explained here does not seem useful to me.
    > 
    > As you know, I was working on avoiding shutdown checkpoints completely
    > myself. You are welcome to work on the approach Fujii and I discussed.
    
    Sorry, I'm afraid that I've failed to find that discussion. Could
    you let me have a pointer to that? Of cource I'd be very happy if
    the checkpoints are completely avoided on the approach.
    
    regards,
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    == My e-mail address has been changed since Apr. 1, 2012.
    
    
  4. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> — 2012-06-12T08:52:43Z

    On 12 June 2012 03:38, Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
    <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> wrote:
    > Hello, sorry for vague understanding.
    >
    >> > I depend on this and suppose we can omit it if latest checkpoint
    >> > has been taken so as to be able to do crash recovery thereafter.
    >>
    >> I don't see any reason to special case this. If a checkpoint has no
    >> work to do, then it will go very quickly. Why seek to speed it up even
    >> further?
    >
    > I want the standby to start to serve as soon as possible even by
    > a few seconds on failover in a HA cluster.
    
    Please implement a prototype and measure how many seconds we are discussing.
    
    
    >> > This condition could be secured by my another patch for
    >> > checkpoint_segments on standby.
    >>
    >> More frequent checkpoints are very unlikely to secure a condition that
    >> no checkpoint at all is required at failover.
    >
    > I understand that checkpoint at the end of recovery is
    > indispensable to ensure the availability of crash recovery
    > afterward. Putting aside the convention about TLI increment and
    > shutdown checkpoint, shutdown checkpoints there seems for me to
    > be omittable if (and not 'only if', I suppose) crash recovery is
    > available at the time.
    >
    > Shutdown checkpoint itself seems dispansable to me, but I'm
    > shamingly not convinced so taking the TLI convention into
    > consideration.
    >
    >
    >> Making a change that has a negative effect for everybody, in the hope
    >> of sometimes improving performance for something that is already fast
    >> doesn't seem a good trade off to me.
    >
    > Hmm.. I suppose the negative effect you've pointed is possible
    > slowing down of hot-standby by the extra checkpoints being
    > discussed in another thread, is it correct? Could you accept this
    > kind of modification if it could be turned off by, say, GUC?
    
    
    This proposal is for a performance enhancement. We normally require
    some proof that the enhancement is real and that it doesn't have a
    poor effect on people not using it. Please make measurements.
    
    It's easy to force more frequent checkpointsif you wish them, so
    please compare the case of more frequent checkpoints.
    
    
    >> Regrettably, the line of thought explained here does not seem useful to me.
    >>
    >> As you know, I was working on avoiding shutdown checkpoints completely
    >> myself. You are welcome to work on the approach Fujii and I discussed.
    >
    > Sorry, I'm afraid that I've failed to find that discussion. Could
    > you let me have a pointer to that? Of cource I'd be very happy if
    > the checkpoints are completely avoided on the approach.
    
    Discussion on a patch submitted to me to the Januray 2012 CommitFest
    to reduce failover time.
    
    -- 
     Simon Riggs                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
  5. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2012-06-12T11:43:07Z

    Hello, Thank you to head me the previous discussion. I'll
    consider them from now.
    
    > > I want the standby to start to serve as soon as possible even by
    > > a few seconds on failover in a HA cluster.
    > 
    > Please implement a prototype and measure how many seconds we
    > are discussing.
    
    I'm sorry to have omitted measurement data. (But it might be
    shown in previous discussion.)
    
    Our previous measurement of failover of PostgreSQL 9.1 +
    Pacemaker on some workload showed that shutdown snapshot takes 8
    seconds out of 42 seconds of total failover time (about 20%).
    
    OS        : RHEL6.1-64
    DBMS      : PostgeSQL 9.1.1
    HA        : pacemaker-1.0.11-1.2.2 x64
    Repl      : sync
    Workload  : master : pgbench / scale factor = 100 (aprx. 1.5GB)
                standby: none (warm-standby)
    
    shared_buffers      = 2.5GB
    wal_buffers         = 4MB
    checkpoint_segments = 300
    checkpoint_timeout  = 15min
    checpoint_completion_target = 0.7
    archive_mode        = on
    
    WAL segment comsumption was about 310 segments / 15 mins under
    the condition above.
    
    > This proposal is for a performance enhancement. We normally require
    > some proof that the enhancement is real and that it doesn't have a
    > poor effect on people not using it. Please make measurements.
    
    On the benchmark above, extra load by more frequent (but the same
    to the its master) checkpoint is not a problem. On the other
    hand, failover time is expected to be shortened to 34 seconds
    from 42 seconds by omitting the shutdown checkpoint.
    (But I have not measured that..)
    
    > Discussion on a patch submitted to me to the Januray 2012 CommitFest
    > to reduce failover time.
    
    Thank you and I'm sorry for missing it. I've found that
    discussions and read them from now.
    
    regards,
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    == My e-mail address has been changed since Apr. 1, 2012.
    
    
  6. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2012-06-18T08:42:17Z

    Hello, This is the new version of the patch.
    
    Your patch introduced new WAL record type XLOG_END_OF_RECOVERY to
    mark the chenge point of TLI. But I think the information is
    already stored in history files and already ready to use in
    current code.
    
    I looked into your first patch and looked over the discussion on
    it, and find that my understanding that TLI switch is operable
    also for crash recovery besides archive recovery was half
    wrong. The correct half was that it can be operable for crash
    recovery if we properly set TimeLineID in StartupXLOG().
    
    To achieve this, I added a new field 'latestTLI' (more proper
    name is welcome) and make it always catch up with the latest TLI
    with no relation to checkpoints. Then set the recovery target in
    StartupXLOG() referring it. Additionaly, in previous patch, I
    checked only checkpoint intervals but this ended with no effect
    as you said. Because the WAL files in pg_xlog are preserved as
    many as required for crash recovery, as I knew...
    
    
    The new patch seems to work correctly for changing of TLI without
    checkpoint following.  And archive recovery and PITR also seems
    to work correctly. The test script for the former is attached
    too.
    
    The new patch consists of two parts. These might should be
    treated as two separate ones..
    
    1. Allow_TLI_Increment_without_Checkpoint_20120618.patch
    
      Removes the assumption after the 'convension' that TLI should
      be incremented only on shutdown checkpoint. This seems actually
      has no problem as the commnet(This is not particularly
      critical).
    
    2. Skip_Checkpoint_on_Promotion_20120618.patch
    
      Skips checkpoint if redo record can be read in-place.
    
    3. Test script for TLI increment patch.
    
      This is only to show how the patch is tested. The point is
      creating TLI increment point not followed by any kind of
      checkpoints.  pg_controldata shows like following after running
      this test script. Latest timeline ID is the new field.
    
       > pg_control version number:            923
       > Database cluster state:               in production
      !> Latest timeline ID:                   2
       > Latest checkpoint location:           0/2000058
       > Prior checkpoint location:            0/2000058
       > Latest checkpoint's REDO location:    0/2000020
      !> Latest checkpoint's TimeLineID:       1
    
      We will see this changing as follows after crash recovery,
    
       > Latest timeline ID:                   2
       > Latest checkpoint location:           0/54D9918
       > Prior checkpoint location:            0/2000058
       > Latest checkpoint's REDO location:    0/54D9918
       > Latest checkpoint's TimeLineID:       2
    
      Then, we should see both two 'ABCDE...'s and two 'VWXYZ...'s in
      the table after the crash recovery.
    
    What do you think about this?
    
    regards,
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    == My e-mail address has been changed since Apr. 1, 2012.
    
  7. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com> — 2012-06-18T16:31:51Z

    On Mon, Jun 18, 2012 at 5:42 PM, Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
    <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> wrote:
    > What do you think about this?
    
    What happens if the server skips an end-of-recovery checkpoint, is promoted to
    the master, runs some write transactions, crashes and restarts automatically
    before it completes checkpoint? In this case, the server needs to do crash
    recovery from the last checkpoint record with old timeline ID to the latest WAL
    record with new timeline ID. How does crash recovery do recovery beyond
    timeline?
    
    Regards,
    
    -- 
    Fujii Masao
    
    
  8. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2012-06-19T08:30:46Z

    Thank you.
    
    > What happens if the server skips an end-of-recovery checkpoint,
    > is promoted to the master, runs some write transactions,
    > crashes and restarts automatically before it completes
    > checkpoint? In this case, the server needs to do crash recovery
    > from the last checkpoint record with old timeline ID to the
    > latest WAL record with new timeline ID. How does crash recovery
    > do recovery beyond timeline?
    
    Basically the same as archive recovery as far as I saw. It is
    already implemented to work in that way.
    
    After this patch applied, StartupXLOG() gets its
    recoveryTargetTLI from the new field lastestTLI in the control
    file instead of the latest checkpoint. And the latest checkpoint
    record informs its TLI and WAL location as before, but its TLI
    does not have a significant meaning in the recovery sequence.
    
    Suggest the case following,
    
          |seg 1     | seg 2    |
    TLI 1 |...c......|....000000|
              C           P  X
    TLI 2            |........00|
    
    * C - checkpoint, P - promotion, X - crash just after here
    
    This shows the situation that the latest checkpoint(restartpoint)
    has been taken at TLI=1/SEG=1/OFF=4 and promoted at
    TLI=1/SEG=2/OFF=5, then crashed just after TLI=2/SEG=2/OFF=8.
    Promotion itself inserts no wal records but creates a copy of the
    current segment for new TLI. the file for TLI=2/SEG=1 should not
    exist. (Who will create it?)
    
    The control file will looks as follows
    
    latest checkpoint : TLI=1/SEG=1/OFF=4
    latest TLI        : 2
    
    So the crash recovery sequence starts from SEG=1/LOC=4.
    expectedTLIs will be (2, 1) so 1 will naturally be selected as
    the TLI for SEG1 and 2 for SEG2 in XLogFileReadAnyTLI().
    
    In the closer view, startup constructs expectedTLIs reading the
    timeline hisotry file corresponds to the recoveryTargetTLI. Then
    runs the recovery sequence from the redo point of the latest
    checkpoint using WALs with the largest TLI - which is
    distinguised by its file name, not header - within the
    expectedTLIs in XLogPageRead(). The only difference to archive
    recovery is XLogFileReadAnyTLI() reads only the WAL files already
    sit in pg_xlog directory, and not reaches archive. The pages with
    the new TLI will be naturally picked up as mentioned above in
    this sequence and then will stop at the last readable record.
    
    latestTLI field in the control file is updated just after the TLI
    was incremented and the new WAL files with the new TLI was
    created. So the crash recovery sequence won't stop before
    reaching the WAL with new TLI disignated in the control file.
    
    
    regards,
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    == My e-mail address has been changed since Apr. 1, 2012.
    
    
  9. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com> — 2012-06-19T15:57:49Z

    On Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 5:30 PM, Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
    <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> wrote:
    > Thank you.
    >
    >> What happens if the server skips an end-of-recovery checkpoint,
    >> is promoted to the master, runs some write transactions,
    >> crashes and restarts automatically before it completes
    >> checkpoint? In this case, the server needs to do crash recovery
    >> from the last checkpoint record with old timeline ID to the
    >> latest WAL record with new timeline ID. How does crash recovery
    >> do recovery beyond timeline?
    >
    > Basically the same as archive recovery as far as I saw. It is
    > already implemented to work in that way.
    >
    > After this patch applied, StartupXLOG() gets its
    > recoveryTargetTLI from the new field lastestTLI in the control
    > file instead of the latest checkpoint. And the latest checkpoint
    > record informs its TLI and WAL location as before, but its TLI
    > does not have a significant meaning in the recovery sequence.
    >
    > Suggest the case following,
    >
    >      |seg 1     | seg 2    |
    > TLI 1 |...c......|....000000|
    >          C           P  X
    > TLI 2            |........00|
    >
    > * C - checkpoint, P - promotion, X - crash just after here
    >
    > This shows the situation that the latest checkpoint(restartpoint)
    > has been taken at TLI=1/SEG=1/OFF=4 and promoted at
    > TLI=1/SEG=2/OFF=5, then crashed just after TLI=2/SEG=2/OFF=8.
    > Promotion itself inserts no wal records but creates a copy of the
    > current segment for new TLI. the file for TLI=2/SEG=1 should not
    > exist. (Who will create it?)
    >
    > The control file will looks as follows
    >
    > latest checkpoint : TLI=1/SEG=1/OFF=4
    > latest TLI        : 2
    >
    > So the crash recovery sequence starts from SEG=1/LOC=4.
    > expectedTLIs will be (2, 1) so 1 will naturally be selected as
    > the TLI for SEG1 and 2 for SEG2 in XLogFileReadAnyTLI().
    >
    > In the closer view, startup constructs expectedTLIs reading the
    > timeline hisotry file corresponds to the recoveryTargetTLI. Then
    > runs the recovery sequence from the redo point of the latest
    > checkpoint using WALs with the largest TLI - which is
    > distinguised by its file name, not header - within the
    > expectedTLIs in XLogPageRead(). The only difference to archive
    > recovery is XLogFileReadAnyTLI() reads only the WAL files already
    > sit in pg_xlog directory, and not reaches archive. The pages with
    > the new TLI will be naturally picked up as mentioned above in
    > this sequence and then will stop at the last readable record.
    >
    > latestTLI field in the control file is updated just after the TLI
    > was incremented and the new WAL files with the new TLI was
    > created. So the crash recovery sequence won't stop before
    > reaching the WAL with new TLI disignated in the control file.
    
    Is it guaranteed that all the files (e.g., the latest timeline history file)
    required for such crash recovery exist in pg_xlog? If yes, your
    approach might work well.
    
    Regards,
    
    -- 
    Fujii Masao
    
    
  10. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2012-06-22T04:03:16Z

    Hello,
    
    > Is it guaranteed that all the files (e.g., the latest timeline history file)
    > required for such crash recovery exist in pg_xlog? If yes, your
    > approach might work well.
    
    Particularly regarding the promotion, the files reuiqred are the
    history file of the latest timeline, the WAL file including redo
    location of the latest restartpoint, and all WAL files after the
    first one each of which is of appropriate timeline.
    
    On current (9.2/9.3dev) implement, as far as I know, archive
    recovery and stream replication will create regular WAL files
    requireded during recovery sequence in slave's pg_xlog
    direcotory. And only restart point removes them older than the
    one on which the restart point takes place. If so, all required
    files mentioned above should be in pg_xlog directory. Is there
    something I've forgotten?
    
    However, it will be more robust if we could check if all required
    files available on promotion. I could guess two approaches which
    might accomplish that.
    
    1. Record the id of the WAL segment which is not in pg_xlog as
       regular WAL file on reading.
    
       For example, if we modify archive recovery so as to make work
       WAL files out of pg_xlog or give a special name which cannot
       be refferred to for fetching them in crash recovery afterward,
       record the id of the segment. The shutdown checkpoint on
       promotion or end of recovery cannot be skipped if this
       recorded segment id is equal or larger than redo point of the
       latest of checkpoint. This approach of cource reduces the
       chance to skip shutdown checkpoint than forcing to copy all
       required files into pg_xlog, but still seems to be effective
       for most common cases, say promoting enough minutes after
       wal-streaming started to have a restart point on a WAL in
       pg_xlog.
    
       I hope this is promising.
    
       Temporary WAL file for streaming? It seems for me to make
       shutdown checkpoint mandatory since no WAL files before
       promotion becomes accessible at the moment. On the other hand,
       preserving somehow the WALs after the latest restartpoint
       seems to have not significant difference to the current way
       from the viewpoint of disk consumption.
    
    2. Check for all required WAL files on promotion or end of
       recovery.
    
       We could check the existence of all required files on
       promotion scanning with the manner similar to recovery. But
       this requires to add the codes similar to the existing or
       induces the labor to weave new function into existing
       code. Furthurmore, this seems to take certain time on
       promotion (or end of recovery).
    
       The discussion about temporary wal files would be the same to 1.
    
    
    regards,
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    == My e-mail address has been changed since Apr. 1, 2012.
    
    
  11. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> — 2012-08-09T09:45:55Z

    On 22 June 2012 05:03, Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
    <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> wrote:
    
    >    I hope this is promising.
    
    I've reviewed this and thought about it over some time.
    
    At first I was unhappy that you'd removed the restriction that
    timelines only change on a shutdown checkpoint. But the reality is
    timelines change at any point in the WAL stream - the only way to tell
    between end of WAL and a timeline change is by looking for later
    timelines.
    
    The rest of the logic seems OK, but its a big thing we're doing here
    and so it will take longer yet. Putting all the theory into comments
    in code would certainly help here.
    
    I don't have much else to say on this right now. I'm not committing
    anything on this now since I'm about to go on holiday, but I'll be
    looking at this when I get back.
    
    For now, I'm going to mark this as Returned With Feedback, but please
    don't be discouraged by that.
    
    -- 
     Simon Riggs                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
  12. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2012-08-30T07:05:49Z

    Hello, sorry for long absense.
    
    > At first I was unhappy that you'd removed the restriction that
    > timelines only change on a shutdown checkpoint. But the reality is
    > timelines change at any point in the WAL stream - the only way to tell
    > between end of WAL and a timeline change is by looking for later
    > timelines.
    
     Yes, I felt uncomfortable with that point. The overlooking map
    of timeline evolution on WAL stream seems obscure, and it should
    have been made clear to do this. I couldn't show the clear map
    for this CF.
    
    > The rest of the logic seems OK, but its a big thing we're doing here
    > and so it will take longer yet. Putting all the theory into comments
    > in code would certainly help here.
    
    Ok, I agreed.
    
    > I don't have much else to say on this right now. I'm not committing
    > anything on this now since I'm about to go on holiday, but I'll be
    > looking at this when I get back.
    
    Have a nice holyday.
    
    > For now, I'm going to mark this as Returned With Feedback, but please
    > don't be discouraged by that.
    
    I think we have enough time to think about that yet, and I
    believe this will be worth doing.
    
    Thank you.
    
    regards,
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    == My e-mail address has been changed since Apr. 1, 2012.
    
    
    
  13. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> — 2012-10-18T20:22:06Z

    This patch seems to have been neglected by both its submitter and the
    reviewer.  Also, Simon said he was going to set it
    returned-with-feedback on his last reply, but I see it as needs-review
    still in the CF app.  Is this something that is going to be reconsidered
    and resubmitted for the next commitfest?  If so, please close it up in
    the current one.
    
    Thanks.
    
    -- 
    Álvaro Herrera                http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  14. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> — 2012-10-18T22:19:02Z

    On 18 October 2012 21:22, Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    
    > This patch seems to have been neglected by both its submitter and the
    > reviewer.  Also, Simon said he was going to set it
    > returned-with-feedback on his last reply, but I see it as needs-review
    > still in the CF app.  Is this something that is going to be reconsidered
    > and resubmitted for the next commitfest?  If so, please close it up in
    > the current one.
    
    I burned time on the unlogged table problems, so haven't got round to
    this yet. I'm happier than I was with this.
    
    I'm also conscious this is very important and there are no later patch
    dependencies, so there's no rush to commit it and every reason to make
    sure it happens without any mistakes. It will be there for 9.3.
    
    -- 
     Simon Riggs                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  15. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> — 2013-01-06T21:58:49Z

    On 9 August 2012 10:45, Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > On 22 June 2012 05:03, Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
    > <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> wrote:
    >
    >>    I hope this is promising.
    >
    > I've reviewed this and thought about it over some time.
    
    I've been torn between the need to remove the checkpoint for speed and
    being worried about the implications of doing so.
    
    We promote in multiple use cases. When we end a PITR, or are
    performing a switchover, it doesn't really matter how long the
    shutdown checkpoint takes, so I'm inclined to leave it there in those
    cases. For failover, we need fast promotion.
    
    So my thinking is to make   pg_ctl promote -m fast
    be the way to initiate a fast failover that skips the shutdown checkpoint.
    
    That way all existing applications work the same as before, while new
    users that explicitly choose to do so will gain from the new option.
    
    -- 
     Simon Riggs                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  16. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> — 2013-01-24T16:24:28Z

    On 6 January 2013 21:58, Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > On 9 August 2012 10:45, Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >> On 22 June 2012 05:03, Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
    >> <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp> wrote:
    >>
    >>>    I hope this is promising.
    >>
    >> I've reviewed this and thought about it over some time.
    >
    > I've been torn between the need to remove the checkpoint for speed and
    > being worried about the implications of doing so.
    >
    > We promote in multiple use cases. When we end a PITR, or are
    > performing a switchover, it doesn't really matter how long the
    > shutdown checkpoint takes, so I'm inclined to leave it there in those
    > cases. For failover, we need fast promotion.
    >
    > So my thinking is to make   pg_ctl promote -m fast
    > be the way to initiate a fast failover that skips the shutdown checkpoint.
    >
    > That way all existing applications work the same as before, while new
    > users that explicitly choose to do so will gain from the new option.
    
    
    Here's a patch to skip checkpoint when we do
    
      pg_ctl promote -m fast
    
    We keep the end of recovery checkpoint in all other cases.
    
    The only thing left from Kyotaro's patch is a single line of code -
    the call to ReadCheckpointRecord() that checks to see if the WAL
    records for the last two restartpoints is on disk, which was an
    important line of code.
    
    Patch implements a new record type XLOG_END_OF_RECOVERY that behaves
    on replay like a shutdown checkpoint record. I put this back in from
    my patch because I believe its important that we have a clear place
    where the WAL history changes timelineId. WAL format change bump
    required.
    
    So far this is only barely tested, but considering time goes on, I
    thought people might want to pass comment on this.
    
    -- 
     Simon Riggs                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  17. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnakangas@vmware.com> — 2013-01-24T16:52:09Z

    On 24.01.2013 18:24, Simon Riggs wrote:
    > On 6 January 2013 21:58, Simon Riggs<simon@2ndquadrant.com>  wrote:
    >> I've been torn between the need to remove the checkpoint for speed and
    >> being worried about the implications of doing so.
    >>
    >> We promote in multiple use cases. When we end a PITR, or are
    >> performing a switchover, it doesn't really matter how long the
    >> shutdown checkpoint takes, so I'm inclined to leave it there in those
    >> cases. For failover, we need fast promotion.
    >>
    >> So my thinking is to make   pg_ctl promote -m fast
    >> be the way to initiate a fast failover that skips the shutdown checkpoint.
    >>
    >> That way all existing applications work the same as before, while new
    >> users that explicitly choose to do so will gain from the new option.
    >
    > Here's a patch to skip checkpoint when we do
    >
    >    pg_ctl promote -m fast
    >
    > We keep the end of recovery checkpoint in all other cases.
    
    Hmm, there seems to be no way to do a "fast" promotion with a trigger file.
    
    I'm a bit confused why there needs to be special mode for this. Can't we 
    just always do the "fast" promotion? I agree that there's no urgency 
    when you're doing PITR, but shouldn't do any harm either. Or perhaps 
    always do "fast" promotion when starting up from standby mode, and 
    "slow" otherwise.
    
    Are we comfortable enough with this to skip the checkpoint after crash 
    recovery?
    
    I may be missing something, but it looks like after a "fast" promotion, 
    you don't request a new checkpoint. So it can take quite a while for the 
    next checkpoint to be triggered by checkpoint_timeout/segments. That 
    shouldn't be a problem, but I feel that it'd be prudent to request a new 
    checkpoint immediately (not necessarily an "immediate" checkpoint, though).
    
    > The only thing left from Kyotaro's patch is a single line of code -
    > the call to ReadCheckpointRecord() that checks to see if the WAL
    > records for the last two restartpoints is on disk, which was an
    > important line of code.
    
    Why's that important, just for paranoia? If the last two restartpoints 
    have disappeared, something's seriously wrong, and you will be in 
    trouble e.g if you crash at that point. Do we need to be extra paranoid 
    when doing a "fast" promotion?
    
    > Patch implements a new record type XLOG_END_OF_RECOVERY that behaves
    > on replay like a shutdown checkpoint record. I put this back in from
    > my patch because I believe its important that we have a clear place
    > where the WAL history changes timelineId. WAL format change bump
    > required.
    
    Agreed, such a WAL record is essential.
    
    At replay, an end-of-recovery record should be a signal to the hot 
    standby mechanism that there are no transactions running in the master 
    at that point, same as a shutdown checkpoint.
    
    - Heikki
    
    
    
  18. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> — 2013-01-24T17:44:26Z

    On 24 January 2013 16:52, Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnakangas@vmware.com> wrote:
    > On 24.01.2013 18:24, Simon Riggs wrote:
    >>
    >> On 6 January 2013 21:58, Simon Riggs<simon@2ndquadrant.com>  wrote:
    >>>
    >>> I've been torn between the need to remove the checkpoint for speed and
    >>>
    >>> being worried about the implications of doing so.
    >>>
    >>> We promote in multiple use cases. When we end a PITR, or are
    >>> performing a switchover, it doesn't really matter how long the
    >>> shutdown checkpoint takes, so I'm inclined to leave it there in those
    >>> cases. For failover, we need fast promotion.
    >>>
    >>> So my thinking is to make   pg_ctl promote -m fast
    >>> be the way to initiate a fast failover that skips the shutdown
    >>> checkpoint.
    >>>
    >>> That way all existing applications work the same as before, while new
    >>> users that explicitly choose to do so will gain from the new option.
    >>
    >>
    >> Here's a patch to skip checkpoint when we do
    >>
    >>    pg_ctl promote -m fast
    >>
    >> We keep the end of recovery checkpoint in all other cases.
    >
    >
    > Hmm, there seems to be no way to do a "fast" promotion with a trigger file.
    
    True. I thought we were moving away from trigger files to use of "promote"
    
    > I'm a bit confused why there needs to be special mode for this. Can't we
    > just always do the "fast" promotion? I agree that there's no urgency when
    > you're doing PITR, but shouldn't do any harm either. Or perhaps always do
    > "fast" promotion when starting up from standby mode, and "slow" otherwise.
    >
    > Are we comfortable enough with this to skip the checkpoint after crash
    > recovery?
    
    I'm not. Maybe if we get no bugs we can make it do this always, in next release.
    
    It;s fast when it needs to be and safe otherwise.
    
    
    > I may be missing something, but it looks like after a "fast" promotion, you
    > don't request a new checkpoint. So it can take quite a while for the next
    > checkpoint to be triggered by checkpoint_timeout/segments. That shouldn't be
    > a problem, but I feel that it'd be prudent to request a new checkpoint
    > immediately (not necessarily an "immediate" checkpoint, though).
    
    I thought of that and there is a long comment to explain why I didn't.
    
    Two problems:
    
    1) an immediate checkpoint can cause a disk/resource usage spike,
    which is definitely not what you need just when a spike of connections
    and new SQL hits the system.
    
    2) If we did that, we would have an EndOfRecovery record, some other
    records and then a Shutdown checkpoint.
    As I right this, (2) is wrong, because we shouldn't do a a Shutdown
    checkpoint anyway.
    
    But I still think (1) is a valid concern.
    
    >> The only thing left from Kyotaro's patch is a single line of code -
    >> the call to ReadCheckpointRecord() that checks to see if the WAL
    >> records for the last two restartpoints is on disk, which was an
    >> important line of code.
    >
    >
    > Why's that important, just for paranoia? If the last two restartpoints have
    > disappeared, something's seriously wrong, and you will be in trouble e.g if
    > you crash at that point. Do we need to be extra paranoid when doing a "fast"
    > promotion?
    
    The check is cheap, so what do we gain by skipping the check?
    
    >> Patch implements a new record type XLOG_END_OF_RECOVERY that behaves
    >> on replay like a shutdown checkpoint record. I put this back in from
    >> my patch because I believe its important that we have a clear place
    >> where the WAL history changes timelineId. WAL format change bump
    >> required.
    >
    >
    > Agreed, such a WAL record is essential.
    >
    > At replay, an end-of-recovery record should be a signal to the hot standby
    > mechanism that there are no transactions running in the master at that
    > point, same as a shutdown checkpoint.
    
    I had a reason why I didn't do that, but it seems to have slipped my mind.
    
    If I can't remember, I'll add it.
    
    -- 
     Simon Riggs                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  19. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> — 2013-01-24T18:54:52Z

    On 24 January 2013 17:44, Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    
    >> At replay, an end-of-recovery record should be a signal to the hot standby
    >> mechanism that there are no transactions running in the master at that
    >> point, same as a shutdown checkpoint.
    >
    > I had a reason why I didn't do that, but it seems to have slipped my mind.
    >
    > If I can't remember, I'll add it.
    
    I think it was simply to keep things simple and avoid bugs in this release.
    
    -- 
     Simon Riggs                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  20. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnakangas@vmware.com> — 2013-01-25T12:15:12Z

    On 24.01.2013 19:44, Simon Riggs wrote:
    > On 24 January 2013 16:52, Heikki Linnakangas<hlinnakangas@vmware.com>  wrote:
    >> I may be missing something, but it looks like after a "fast" promotion, you
    >> don't request a new checkpoint. So it can take quite a while for the next
    >> checkpoint to be triggered by checkpoint_timeout/segments. That shouldn't be
    >> a problem, but I feel that it'd be prudent to request a new checkpoint
    >> immediately (not necessarily an "immediate" checkpoint, though).
    >
    > I thought of that and there is a long comment to explain why I didn't.
    >
    > Two problems:
    >
    > 1) an immediate checkpoint can cause a disk/resource usage spike,
    > which is definitely not what you need just when a spike of connections
    > and new SQL hits the system.
    
    It doesn't need to be an "immediate" checkpoint, ie. you don't need to 
    rush through it with checkpoint_completion_target=0. I think you should 
    initiate a regular, slow, checkpoint, right after writing the 
    end-of-recovery record. It can take some time for it to finish, which is ok.
    
    There's no hard correctness reason here for any particular behavior, I 
    just feel that that would make most sense. It seems prudent to initiate 
    a checkpoint right after timeline switch, so that you get a new 
    checkpoint on the new timeline fairly soon - it could take up to 
    checkpoint_timeout otherwise, but there's no terrible rush to finish it 
    ASAP.
    
    - Heikki
    
    
    
  21. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com> — 2013-01-25T13:26:30Z

    On 25 January 2013 12:15, Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnakangas@vmware.com> wrote:
    
    >> 1) an immediate checkpoint can cause a disk/resource usage spike,
    >> which is definitely not what you need just when a spike of connections
    >> and new SQL hits the system.
    >
    >
    > It doesn't need to be an "immediate" checkpoint, ie. you don't need to rush
    > through it with checkpoint_completion_target=0. I think you should initiate
    > a regular, slow, checkpoint, right after writing the end-of-recovery record.
    > It can take some time for it to finish, which is ok.
    
    OK, will add.
    
    -- 
     Simon Riggs                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  22. Re: Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2013-01-25T15:20:07Z

    Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnakangas@vmware.com> writes:
    > There's no hard correctness reason here for any particular behavior, I 
    > just feel that that would make most sense. It seems prudent to initiate 
    > a checkpoint right after timeline switch, so that you get a new 
    > checkpoint on the new timeline fairly soon - it could take up to 
    > checkpoint_timeout otherwise, but there's no terrible rush to finish it 
    > ASAP.
    
    +1.  The way I would think about it is that we're switching from a
    checkpointing regime appropriate to a slave to one appropriate to a
    master.  If the last restartpoint was far back, compared to the
    configured checkpoint timing for master operation, we're at risk that a
    crash could take longer than desired to recover.  So we ought to embark
    right away on a fresh checkpoint, but do it in the same way it would be
    done in normal master operation (thus, not immediate).  Once it's done
    we'll be in the expected checkpointing state for a master.
    
    			regards, tom lane