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Commits

  1. Prevent excessive delays before launching new logrep workers.

  1. Logrep launcher race conditions leading to slow tests

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2025-06-23T23:56:47Z

    I've been annoyed for awhile because, while a parallel check-world
    run usually takes a bit over a minute on my machine, sometimes it
    takes between three and four minutes.  I was finally able to
    track down what is happening, and it's this: sometimes one or
    another of the src/test/subscription tests takes an extra three
    minutes because the logical replication launcher is sleeping
    instead of launching the next task.  It eventually reaches its
    hard-wired maximum wait of DEFAULT_NAPTIME_PER_CYCLE (3min),
    wakes up and notices it has something to do, and then we're
    on our merry way again.  I'm not sure how often this is a problem
    in the real world, but it happens often enough to be annoying
    during development.
    
    There are two distinct bugs involved:
    
    1. WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach sometimes has to clear a process
    latch event so that it can keep waiting for the worker to launch.
    It neglects to set the latch again, allowing ApplyLauncherMain
    to miss events.
    
    2. ApplyLauncherMain ignores a failure return from
    logicalrep_worker_launch, which is bad because (unless it has
    another worker launch pending) it will then sleep for
    DEFAULT_NAPTIME_PER_CYCLE before reconsidering.  What it ought to do
    is try again after wal_retrieve_retry_interval.  This situation can
    arise in resource-exhaustion cases (cf. the early exits in
    logicalrep_worker_launch), but what's more likely in the regression
    tests is that the worker stops due to some error condition before
    WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach sees it attached, which is then duly
    reported as a failure.
    
    It's possible to make the test slowness extremely reproducible
    with this change, which widens the race condition window for
    both problems:
    
    diff --git a/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c b/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c
    index 1c3c051403d..724e82bcdc1 100644
    --- a/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c
    +++ b/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c
    @@ -214,7 +214,7 @@ WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach(LogicalRepWorker *worker,
     		 */
     		rc = WaitLatch(MyLatch,
     					   WL_LATCH_SET | WL_TIMEOUT | WL_EXIT_ON_PM_DEATH,
    -					   10L, WAIT_EVENT_BGWORKER_STARTUP);
    +					   1000L, WAIT_EVENT_BGWORKER_STARTUP);
     
     		if (rc & WL_LATCH_SET)
     		{
    
    I don't recommend that as a permanent change, but it's helpful
    for testing the attached patch.
    
    In the attached, I made two other non-cosmetic changes:
    
    3. In WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach, capture worker->in_use
    before not after releasing LogicalRepWorkerLock.  Maybe there
    is a reason why that's not a dangerous race condition, but
    it sure is un-obvious to me.
    
    4. In process_syncing_tables_for_apply (the other caller of
    logicalrep_worker_launch), it seems okay to ignore the
    result of logicalrep_worker_launch, but I think it should
    fill hentry->last_start_time before not after the call.
    Otherwise we might be changing a hashtable entry that's
    no longer relevant to this worker.  I'm not sure exactly
    where the failed worker will be cleaned-up-after, but
    it could very easily be out of the system entirely before
    logicalrep_worker_launch returns.
    
    Barring objections, I plan to apply and back-patch this.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  2. Re: Logrep launcher race conditions leading to slow tests

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2025-06-24T10:20:37Z

    On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 5:26 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >
    > I've been annoyed for awhile because, while a parallel check-world
    > run usually takes a bit over a minute on my machine, sometimes it
    > takes between three and four minutes.  I was finally able to
    > track down what is happening, and it's this: sometimes one or
    > another of the src/test/subscription tests takes an extra three
    > minutes because the logical replication launcher is sleeping
    > instead of launching the next task.  It eventually reaches its
    > hard-wired maximum wait of DEFAULT_NAPTIME_PER_CYCLE (3min),
    > wakes up and notices it has something to do, and then we're
    > on our merry way again.  I'm not sure how often this is a problem
    > in the real world, but it happens often enough to be annoying
    > during development.
    >
    > There are two distinct bugs involved:
    >
    > 1. WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach sometimes has to clear a process
    > latch event so that it can keep waiting for the worker to launch.
    > It neglects to set the latch again, allowing ApplyLauncherMain
    > to miss events.
    >
    
    There was a previous discussion to fix this behavior. Heikki has
    proposed a similar fix for this, but at the caller. See the patch
    attached in email [1]. The comments in his patch are more explicit
    about the kind of events that are missed. Then there is also a
    discussion solving it by having two latches, one for worker exiting
    and the other for subscription changes. There is a slight advantage
    with the approach of using two latches, which is probably to avoid
    extra looping to traverse the subscriptions when nothing has changed.
    I find one of your or Heikki's proposals to fix this issue is good
    enough.
    
    > 2. ApplyLauncherMain ignores a failure return from
    > logicalrep_worker_launch, which is bad because (unless it has
    > another worker launch pending) it will then sleep for
    > DEFAULT_NAPTIME_PER_CYCLE before reconsidering.  What it ought to do
    > is try again after wal_retrieve_retry_interval.  This situation can
    > arise in resource-exhaustion cases (cf. the early exits in
    > logicalrep_worker_launch), but what's more likely in the regression
    > tests is that the worker stops due to some error condition before
    > WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach sees it attached, which is then duly
    > reported as a failure.
    >
    
    LGTM.
    
    > It's possible to make the test slowness extremely reproducible
    > with this change, which widens the race condition window for
    > both problems:
    >
    > diff --git a/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c b/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c
    > index 1c3c051403d..724e82bcdc1 100644
    > --- a/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c
    > +++ b/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c
    > @@ -214,7 +214,7 @@ WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach(LogicalRepWorker *worker,
    >                  */
    >                 rc = WaitLatch(MyLatch,
    >                                            WL_LATCH_SET | WL_TIMEOUT | WL_EXIT_ON_PM_DEATH,
    > -                                          10L, WAIT_EVENT_BGWORKER_STARTUP);
    > +                                          1000L, WAIT_EVENT_BGWORKER_STARTUP);
    >
    >                 if (rc & WL_LATCH_SET)
    >                 {
    >
    > I don't recommend that as a permanent change, but it's helpful
    > for testing the attached patch.
    >
    > In the attached, I made two other non-cosmetic changes:
    >
    > 3. In WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach, capture worker->in_use
    > before not after releasing LogicalRepWorkerLock.  Maybe there
    > is a reason why that's not a dangerous race condition, but
    > it sure is un-obvious to me.
    >
    
    I also can't think of a reason to use current coding. Your change
    looks good to me.
    
    > 4. In process_syncing_tables_for_apply (the other caller of
    > logicalrep_worker_launch), it seems okay to ignore the
    > result of logicalrep_worker_launch, but I think it should
    > fill hentry->last_start_time before not after the call.
    
    With this, won't we end up retrying to launch the worker sooner if the
    launch took time, but still failed to launch the worker?
    
    [1] - https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/ff0663d9-8011-420f-a169-efbf57327cb5%40iki.fi
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    
    
    
    
  3. Re: Logrep launcher race conditions leading to slow tests

    Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat.oss@gmail.com> — 2025-06-24T11:50:10Z

    On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 5:26 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >
    > I've been annoyed for awhile because, while a parallel check-world
    > run usually takes a bit over a minute on my machine, sometimes it
    > takes between three and four minutes.  I was finally able to
    > track down what is happening, and it's this: sometimes one or
    > another of the src/test/subscription tests takes an extra three
    > minutes because the logical replication launcher is sleeping
    > instead of launching the next task.  It eventually reaches its
    > hard-wired maximum wait of DEFAULT_NAPTIME_PER_CYCLE (3min),
    > wakes up and notices it has something to do, and then we're
    > on our merry way again.  I'm not sure how often this is a problem
    > in the real world, but it happens often enough to be annoying
    > during development.
    >
    > There are two distinct bugs involved:
    >
    > 1. WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach sometimes has to clear a process
    > latch event so that it can keep waiting for the worker to launch.
    > It neglects to set the latch again, allowing ApplyLauncherMain
    > to miss events.
    
    Agreed.
    
    >
    > 2. ApplyLauncherMain ignores a failure return from
    > logicalrep_worker_launch, which is bad because (unless it has
    > another worker launch pending) it will then sleep for
    > DEFAULT_NAPTIME_PER_CYCLE before reconsidering.  What it ought to do
    > is try again after wal_retrieve_retry_interval.  This situation can
    > arise in resource-exhaustion cases (cf. the early exits in
    > logicalrep_worker_launch), but what's more likely in the regression
    > tests is that the worker stops due to some error condition before
    > WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach sees it attached, which is then duly
    > reported as a failure.
    
    Agreed.
    
    >
    > It's possible to make the test slowness extremely reproducible
    > with this change, which widens the race condition window for
    > both problems:
    >
    > diff --git a/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c b/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c
    > index 1c3c051403d..724e82bcdc1 100644
    > --- a/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c
    > +++ b/src/backend/replication/logical/launcher.c
    > @@ -214,7 +214,7 @@ WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach(LogicalRepWorker *worker,
    >                  */
    >                 rc = WaitLatch(MyLatch,
    >                                            WL_LATCH_SET | WL_TIMEOUT | WL_EXIT_ON_PM_DEATH,
    > -                                          10L, WAIT_EVENT_BGWORKER_STARTUP);
    > +                                          1000L, WAIT_EVENT_BGWORKER_STARTUP);
    >
    >                 if (rc & WL_LATCH_SET)
    >                 {
    >
    > I don't recommend that as a permanent change, but it's helpful
    > for testing the attached patch.
    
    Thanks. That makes reproduction easier.
    
    >
    > In the attached, I made two other non-cosmetic changes:
    >
    > 3. In WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach, capture worker->in_use
    > before not after releasing LogicalRepWorkerLock.  Maybe there
    > is a reason why that's not a dangerous race condition, but
    > it sure is un-obvious to me.
    
    Looking at the code this seems to be dangerous. We will return from
    the condition if worker->in_use = false which means that the slot is
    free. By the time we release LogicalRepWorkerLock and read the value
    of worker->in_use, it may have been filled with some other worker and
    thus return true instead of false, and the caller would falsely assume
    that the worker was successfully launched. That itself might cause the
    launcher to not start the worker again. That's possibly rare but not
    impossible.
    
    +1 for this change.
    
    >
    > 4. In process_syncing_tables_for_apply (the other caller of
    > logicalrep_worker_launch), it seems okay to ignore the
    > result of logicalrep_worker_launch, but I think it should
    > fill hentry->last_start_time before not after the call.
    > Otherwise we might be changing a hashtable entry that's
    > no longer relevant to this worker.
    
    A hash entry is associated with a table, not the worker. In case the
    worker fails to launch it records the time when worker launch for that
    table was attempted so that next attempt could be well-spaced in time.
    I am not able your last statement, what is the entry's relevance to
    the worker.
    
    But your change makes this code similar to ApplyLauncherMain(), which
    deals with subscriptions. +1 for the consistency.
    
    --
    Best Wishes,
    Ashutosh Bapat
    
    
    
    
  4. Re: Logrep launcher race conditions leading to slow tests

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2025-06-24T16:23:02Z

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> writes:
    > On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 5:26 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >> 1. WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach sometimes has to clear a process
    >> latch event so that it can keep waiting for the worker to launch.
    >> It neglects to set the latch again, allowing ApplyLauncherMain
    >> to miss events.
    
    > There was a previous discussion to fix this behavior. Heikki has
    > proposed a similar fix for this, but at the caller. See the patch
    > attached in email [1].
    
    Ah, thank you for that link.  I vaguely recalled that we'd discussed
    this strange behavior before, but I did not realize that anyone had
    diagnosed a cause.  I don't much like any of the patches proposed
    in that thread though --- they seem overcomplicated or off-point.
    
    I do not think we can switch to having two latches here.  The
    only reason WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach needs to pay attention
    to the process latch at all is that it needs to service
    CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() conditions in a timely fashion, which is
    also true in the ApplyLauncherMain loop.  We can't realistically
    expect other processes to signal different latches depending on
    where the launcher is waiting, so those cases have to be triggered
    by the same latch.
    
    However, WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach can't service any
    latch-setting conditions other than those managed by
    CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS().  So if CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() returns,
    we have some other triggering condition, which is the business
    of some outer code level to deal with.  Having it re-set the latch
    to allow that to happen promptly after it returns seems like a
    pretty straightforward answer to me.
    
    I do note Heikki's concern about whether we could get rid of the
    sleep-and-retry looping in WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach in
    favor of getting signaled somehow, and I agree with that as a
    possible future improvement.  But I don't especially see why that
    demands another latch; in fact, unless we want to teach WaitLatch
    to be able to wait on more than one latch, it *can't* be a
    separate latch from the one that receives CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS()
    conditions.
    
    >> 4. In process_syncing_tables_for_apply (the other caller of
    >> logicalrep_worker_launch), it seems okay to ignore the
    >> result of logicalrep_worker_launch, but I think it should
    >> fill hentry->last_start_time before not after the call.
    
    > With this, won't we end up retrying to launch the worker sooner if the
    > launch took time, but still failed to launch the worker?
    
    That code already does update last_start_time unconditionally, and
    I think that's the right behavior for the same reason that it's
    right for ApplyLauncherMain to do ApplyLauncherSetWorkerStartTime
    whether or not logicalrep_worker_launch succeeds.  If the worker
    launch fails, we don't want to retry instantly, we want to wait
    wal_retrieve_retry_interval before retrying.  My desire to change
    this code is just based on the idea that it's not clear what else
    if anything looks at this hashtable, and by the time that
    logicalrep_worker_launch returns the system state could be a lot
    different.  (For instance, the worker could have started and
    failed already.)  So, just as in ApplyLauncherMain, I'd rather
    store the start time before calling logicalrep_worker_launch.
    
    BTW, it strikes me that if we're going to leave
    process_syncing_tables_for_apply() ignoring the result of
    logicalrep_worker_launch, it'd be smart to insert an explicit
    (void) cast to show that that's intentional.  Otherwise Coverity
    is likely to complain about how we're ignoring the result in
    one place and not the other.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  5. Re: Logrep launcher race conditions leading to slow tests

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2025-06-24T16:33:00Z

    Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat.oss@gmail.com> writes:
    > On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 5:26 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >> 4. In process_syncing_tables_for_apply (the other caller of
    >> logicalrep_worker_launch), it seems okay to ignore the
    >> result of logicalrep_worker_launch, but I think it should
    >> fill hentry->last_start_time before not after the call.
    >> Otherwise we might be changing a hashtable entry that's
    >> no longer relevant to this worker.
    
    > A hash entry is associated with a table, not the worker. In case the
    > worker fails to launch it records the time when worker launch for that
    > table was attempted so that next attempt could be well-spaced in time.
    > I am not able your last statement, what is the entry's relevance to
    > the worker.
    
    > But your change makes this code similar to ApplyLauncherMain(), which
    > deals with subscriptions. +1 for the consistency.
    
    Yeah, mainly I want to make it look more like ApplyLauncherMain().
    It's true right now that nothing outside this process will touch that
    hash table, so it doesn't matter which way we do it.  But if we were
    to switch that table to being shared state, this'd be an unsafe order
    of operations for the same reasons it'd be wrong to do it like that in
    ApplyLauncherMain().
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  6. Re: Logrep launcher race conditions leading to slow tests

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2025-06-25T03:48:39Z

    On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 9:53 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >
    > Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> writes:
    > > On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 5:26 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > >> 1. WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach sometimes has to clear a process
    > >> latch event so that it can keep waiting for the worker to launch.
    > >> It neglects to set the latch again, allowing ApplyLauncherMain
    > >> to miss events.
    >
    > > There was a previous discussion to fix this behavior. Heikki has
    > > proposed a similar fix for this, but at the caller. See the patch
    > > attached in email [1].
    >
    > Ah, thank you for that link.  I vaguely recalled that we'd discussed
    > this strange behavior before, but I did not realize that anyone had
    > diagnosed a cause.  I don't much like any of the patches proposed
    > in that thread though --- they seem overcomplicated or off-point.
    >
    > I do not think we can switch to having two latches here.  The
    > only reason WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach needs to pay attention
    > to the process latch at all is that it needs to service
    > CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() conditions in a timely fashion, which is
    > also true in the ApplyLauncherMain loop.  We can't realistically
    > expect other processes to signal different latches depending on
    > where the launcher is waiting, so those cases have to be triggered
    > by the same latch.
    >
    > However, WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach can't service any
    > latch-setting conditions other than those managed by
    > CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS().  So if CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() returns,
    > we have some other triggering condition, which is the business
    > of some outer code level to deal with.  Having it re-set the latch
    > to allow that to happen promptly after it returns seems like a
    > pretty straightforward answer to me.
    >
    > I do note Heikki's concern about whether we could get rid of the
    > sleep-and-retry looping in WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach in
    > favor of getting signaled somehow, and I agree with that as a
    > possible future improvement.  But I don't especially see why that
    > demands another latch; in fact, unless we want to teach WaitLatch
    > to be able to wait on more than one latch, it *can't* be a
    > separate latch from the one that receives CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS()
    > conditions.
    >
    
    I agree that we don't need another latch, and I find your patch solves
    it in the best possible way. The only minor point if you think makes
    sense to change is the following comment:
    + /*
    + * If we had to clear a latch event in order to wait, be sure to restore
    + * it before exiting.  Otherwise caller may miss events.
    + */
    + if (dropped_latch)
    ..
    
    The part of the comment "Otherwise caller may miss events." is clear
    to me, but I'm not sure if it would be equally easy for everyone to
    understand what the other events code is talking about here. Something
    on the lines of what Heikki wrote, " We use the same latch to be
    signalled about subscription changes and workers exiting, so we might
    have missed some notifications, if those events happened
    concurrently." is more specific.
    
    > >> 4. In process_syncing_tables_for_apply (the other caller of
    > >> logicalrep_worker_launch), it seems okay to ignore the
    > >> result of logicalrep_worker_launch, but I think it should
    > >> fill hentry->last_start_time before not after the call.
    >
    > > With this, won't we end up retrying to launch the worker sooner if the
    > > launch took time, but still failed to launch the worker?
    >
    > That code already does update last_start_time unconditionally, and
    > I think that's the right behavior for the same reason that it's
    > right for ApplyLauncherMain to do ApplyLauncherSetWorkerStartTime
    > whether or not logicalrep_worker_launch succeeds.  If the worker
    > launch fails, we don't want to retry instantly, we want to wait
    > wal_retrieve_retry_interval before retrying.  My desire to change
    > this code is just based on the idea that it's not clear what else
    > if anything looks at this hashtable, and by the time that
    > logicalrep_worker_launch returns the system state could be a lot
    > different.  (For instance, the worker could have started and
    > failed already.)  So, just as in ApplyLauncherMain, I'd rather
    > store the start time before calling logicalrep_worker_launch.
    >
    > BTW, it strikes me that if we're going to leave
    > process_syncing_tables_for_apply() ignoring the result of
    > logicalrep_worker_launch, it'd be smart to insert an explicit
    > (void) cast to show that that's intentional.  Otherwise Coverity
    > is likely to complain about how we're ignoring the result in
    > one place and not the other.
    >
    
    Sounds reasonable.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    
    
    
    
  7. Re: Logrep launcher race conditions leading to slow tests

    Dilip Kumar <dilipbalaut@gmail.com> — 2025-06-25T05:33:39Z

    On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 9:53 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >
    > Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> writes:
    > > On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 5:26 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > >> 1. WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach sometimes has to clear a process
    > >> latch event so that it can keep waiting for the worker to launch.
    > >> It neglects to set the latch again, allowing ApplyLauncherMain
    > >> to miss events.
    >
    > > There was a previous discussion to fix this behavior. Heikki has
    > > proposed a similar fix for this, but at the caller. See the patch
    > > attached in email [1].
    >
    > Ah, thank you for that link.  I vaguely recalled that we'd discussed
    > this strange behavior before, but I did not realize that anyone had
    > diagnosed a cause.  I don't much like any of the patches proposed
    > in that thread though --- they seem overcomplicated or off-point.
    >
    > I do not think we can switch to having two latches here.  The
    > only reason WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach needs to pay attention
    > to the process latch at all is that it needs to service
    > CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() conditions in a timely fashion, which is
    > also true in the ApplyLauncherMain loop.  We can't realistically
    > expect other processes to signal different latches depending on
    > where the launcher is waiting, so those cases have to be triggered
    > by the same latch.
    >
    > However, WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach can't service any
    > latch-setting conditions other than those managed by
    > CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS().  So if CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() returns,
    > we have some other triggering condition, which is the business
    > of some outer code level to deal with.  Having it re-set the latch
    > to allow that to happen promptly after it returns seems like a
    > pretty straightforward answer to me.
    
    Yeah that makes sense, we can not simply wait on another latch which
    is not managed by CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS(), and IMHO the proposed patch
    looks simple for resolving this issue.
    
    -- 
    Regards,
    Dilip Kumar
    Google
    
    
    
    
  8. Re: Logrep launcher race conditions leading to slow tests

    Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat.oss@gmail.com> — 2025-06-25T10:32:41Z

    On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 9:53 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >
    > BTW, it strikes me that if we're going to leave
    > process_syncing_tables_for_apply() ignoring the result of
    > logicalrep_worker_launch, it'd be smart to insert an explicit
    > (void) cast to show that that's intentional.  Otherwise Coverity
    > is likely to complain about how we're ignoring the result in
    > one place and not the other.
    
    +1.
    
    On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 10:03 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >
    > Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat.oss@gmail.com> writes:
    > > On Tue, Jun 24, 2025 at 5:26 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > >> 4. In process_syncing_tables_for_apply (the other caller of
    > >> logicalrep_worker_launch), it seems okay to ignore the
    > >> result of logicalrep_worker_launch, but I think it should
    > >> fill hentry->last_start_time before not after the call.
    > >> Otherwise we might be changing a hashtable entry that's
    > >> no longer relevant to this worker.
    >
    > > A hash entry is associated with a table, not the worker. In case the
    > > worker fails to launch it records the time when worker launch for that
    > > table was attempted so that next attempt could be well-spaced in time.
    > > I am not able your last statement, what is the entry's relevance to
    > > the worker.
    >
    > > But your change makes this code similar to ApplyLauncherMain(), which
    > > deals with subscriptions. +1 for the consistency.
    >
    > Yeah, mainly I want to make it look more like ApplyLauncherMain().
    > It's true right now that nothing outside this process will touch that
    > hash table, so it doesn't matter which way we do it.  But if we were
    > to switch that table to being shared state, this'd be an unsafe order
    > of operations for the same reasons it'd be wrong to do it like that in
    > ApplyLauncherMain().
    
    Makes sense to fix it proactively.
    
    -- 
    Best Wishes,
    Ashutosh Bapat