Thread
Commits
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Rearrange pgstat_bestart() to avoid failures within its critical section.
- 85ccb6899c6c 12.0 landed
- eb97242c2f78 11.4 landed
- c3d113136bba 10.9 landed
- 899f943ca43a 9.5.18 landed
- 27d3394b0d89 9.6.14 landed
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Fix union for pgstat message types
- 659e53498c3c 12.0 cited
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Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> — 2019-05-06T18:24:31Z
Hello, We are using PG 10.6. We have one cron job that queries pg_stat_activity table to find out how many queries are running longer than X minutes and generate metrics. Query look like this : SELECT * FROM pg_stat_activity WHERE state='active' After some days, this query get stuck and doesn't finish. We tried to run this query manually and same result. We looked into pg_locks table and there this query is not blocked on any lock : https://justpaste.it/48rpe Now we don't know where to look next. Our expectation was query on pg_stat_activity shouldn't get blocked on anything and pg_locks also showing same result. Google search also not returning anything useful that is why reaching out to this email list. We have separated that DB and issue is still produceable on that DB, in case if more information is not needed. ------------------------------------- Thanks Neeraj
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-06T21:33:06Z
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > We are using PG 10.6. We have one cron job that queries pg_stat_activity > table to find out how many queries are running longer than X minutes and > generate metrics. > Query look like this : > SELECT * FROM pg_stat_activity WHERE state='active' > After some days, this query get stuck and doesn't finish. We tried to run > this query manually and same result. > We looked into pg_locks table and there this query is not blocked on any > lock : > https://justpaste.it/48rpe Interesting. Can you get a stack trace to show where in the code it's stuck? https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Generating_a_stack_trace_of_a_PostgreSQL_backend regards, tom lane
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> — 2019-05-08T17:42:12Z
Took some time to get stack trace as we didn't had root permission. Attaching stack trace of two process (out of many) stuck for same query below[1][2] Seems like call is unable to come out of this loop : https://github.com/postgres/postgres/blob/master/src/backend/postmaster/pgstat.c#L3361-L3400 All stack trace's top function points to somewhere in this loop so it means calls are not stuck, but are unable to come out of this loop. [1] [12:43:30][root][~]$ pstack 6283 #0 pgstat_read_current_status () at pgstat.c:3495 #1 0x0000000000732381 in pgstat_read_current_status () at pgstat.c:2566 #2 pgstat_fetch_stat_numbackends () at pgstat.c:2567 #3 0x000000000083bfef in pg_stat_get_activity (fcinfo=0x7ffd26955b80) at pgstatfuncs.c:581 #4 0x00000000006832a1 in ExecMakeTableFunctionResult (setexpr=0x14ea907dcc60, econtext=0x14ea907dca50, argContext=<optimized out>, expectedDesc=0x14ea907df048, randomAccess=0 '\000') at execSRF.c:231 #5 0x000000000068e7b3 in FunctionNext (node=node@entry=0x14ea907dc298) at nodeFunctionscan.c:94 #6 0x000000000068275a in ExecScanFetch (recheckMtd=0x68e4e0 <FunctionRecheck>, accessMtd=0x68e500 <FunctionNext>, node=0x14ea907dc298) at execScan.c:97 #7 ExecScan (node=0x14ea907dc298, accessMtd=0x68e500 <FunctionNext>, recheckMtd=0x68e4e0 <FunctionRecheck>) at execScan.c:147 #8 0x0000000000688009 in ExecProcNode (node=0x14ea907dc298) at ../../../src/include/executor/executor.h:250 #9 fetch_input_tuple (aggstate=aggstate@entry=0x14ea907dc4f8) at nodeAgg.c:695 #10 0x000000000068a0af in agg_retrieve_direct (aggstate=0x14ea907dc4f8) at nodeAgg.c:2347 #11 ExecAgg (pstate=0x14ea907dc4f8) at nodeAgg.c:2158 #12 0x000000000067cce2 in ExecProcNode (node=0x14ea907dc4f8) at ../../../src/include/executor/executor.h:250 #13 ExecutePlan (execute_once=<optimized out>, dest=0x14ea907a1190, direction=<optimized out>, numberTuples=0, sendTuples=<optimized out>, operation=CMD_SELECT, use_parallel_mode=<optimized out>, planstate=0x14ea907dc4f8, estate=0x14ea907dc038) at execMain.c:1723 #14 standard_ExecutorRun (queryDesc=0x14ea906cc038, direction=<optimized out>, count=0, execute_once=<optimized out>) at execMain.c:364 #15 0x000014ed56cee425 in pgss_ExecutorRun (queryDesc=0x14ea906cc038, direction=ForwardScanDirection, count=0, execute_once=<optimized out>) at pg_stat_statements.c:891 #16 0x000014ed56cd760e in explain_ExecutorRun (queryDesc=0x14ea906cc038, direction=ForwardScanDirection, count=0, execute_once=<optimized out>) at auto_explain.c:267 #17 0x00000000007b328c in PortalRunSelect (portal=portal@entry=0x14ea907da038, forward=forward@entry=1 '\001', count=0, count@entry=9223372036854775807, dest=dest@entry=0x14ea907a1190) at pquery.c:932 #18 0x00000000007b4630 in PortalRun (portal=portal@entry=0x14ea907da038, count=count@entry=9223372036854775807, isTopLevel=isTopLevel@entry=1 '\001', run_once=run_once@entry=1 '\001', dest=dest@entry=0x14ea907a1190, altdest=altdest@entry=0x14ea907a1190, completionTag=0x7ffd26956530 "") at pquery.c:773 #19 0x00000000007b0223 in exec_simple_query (query_string=0x14ed51d1f038 "select count(*) from pg_stat_activity;") at postgres.c:1145 #20 0x00000000007b2388 in PostgresMain (argc=<optimized out>, argv=argv@entry=0x14ed51dd42a8, dbname=0x14ed51dd4158 "db_name", username=<optimized out>) at postgres.c:4235 #21 0x00000000004cf2ae in BackendRun (port=0x14ed51dfa380) at postmaster.c:4791 #22 BackendStartup (port=0x14ed51dfa380) at postmaster.c:4458 #23 ServerLoop () at postmaster.c:1930 #24 0x0000000000739d58 in PostmasterMain (argc=argc@entry=9, argv=argv@entry=0x14ed51c246f0) at postmaster.c:1557 #25 0x00000000004d1594 in main (argc=9, argv=0x14ed51c246f0) at main.c:228 [2] [14:53:36][root][~]$ pstack 82504 #0 0x000000000072e053 in pgstat_read_current_status () at pgstat.c:3467 #1 0x0000000000732381 in pgstat_read_current_status () at pgstat.c:2566 #2 pgstat_fetch_stat_numbackends () at pgstat.c:2567 #3 0x000000000083bfef in pg_stat_get_activity (fcinfo=0x7ffd26955c30) at pgstatfuncs.c:581 #4 0x00000000006832a1 in ExecMakeTableFunctionResult (setexpr=0x14ea906e95b0, econtext=0x14ea906e8a50, argContext=<optimized out>, expectedDesc=0x14ea906eb958, randomAccess=0 '\000') at execSRF.c:231 #5 0x000000000068e7b3 in FunctionNext (node=node@entry=0x14ea906e8298) at nodeFunctionscan.c:94 #6 0x00000000006826e7 in ExecScanFetch (recheckMtd=0x68e4e0 <FunctionRecheck>, accessMtd=0x68e500 <FunctionNext>, node=0x14ea906e8298) at execScan.c:97 #7 ExecScan (node=0x14ea906e8298, accessMtd=0x68e500 <FunctionNext>, recheckMtd=0x68e4e0 <FunctionRecheck>) at execScan.c:164 #8 0x0000000000688009 in ExecProcNode (node=0x14ea906e8298) at ../../../src/include/executor/executor.h:250 #9 fetch_input_tuple (aggstate=aggstate@entry=0x14ea906e84f8) at nodeAgg.c:695 #10 0x000000000068a0af in agg_retrieve_direct (aggstate=0x14ea906e84f8) at nodeAgg.c:2347 #11 ExecAgg (pstate=0x14ea906e84f8) at nodeAgg.c:2158 #12 0x000000000067cce2 in ExecProcNode (node=0x14ea906e84f8) at ../../../src/include/executor/executor.h:250 #13 ExecutePlan (execute_once=<optimized out>, dest=0x14ed51d1f448, direction=<optimized out>, numberTuples=0, sendTuples=<optimized out>, operation=CMD_SELECT, use_parallel_mode=<optimized out>, planstate=0x14ea906e84f8, estate=0x14ea906e8038) at execMain.c:1723 #14 standard_ExecutorRun (queryDesc=0x14ed51d854b8, direction=<optimized out>, count=0, execute_once=<optimized out>) at execMain.c:364 #15 0x000014ed56cee425 in pgss_ExecutorRun (queryDesc=0x14ed51d854b8, direction=ForwardScanDirection, count=0, execute_once=<optimized out>) at pg_stat_statements.c:891 #16 0x000014ed56cd760e in explain_ExecutorRun (queryDesc=0x14ed51d854b8, direction=ForwardScanDirection, count=0, execute_once=<optimized out>) at auto_explain.c:267 #17 0x00000000007b328c in PortalRunSelect (portal=portal@entry=0x14ed51e08038, forward=forward@entry=1 '\001', count=0, count@entry=9223372036854775807, dest=dest@entry=0x14ed51d1f448) at pquery.c:932 #18 0x00000000007b4630 in PortalRun (portal=portal@entry=0x14ed51e08038, count=count@entry=9223372036854775807, isTopLevel=isTopLevel@entry=1 '\001', run_once=<optimized out>, dest=dest@entry=0x14ed51d1f448, altdest=altdest@entry=0x14ed51d1f448, completionTag=0x7ffd26956730 "") at pquery.c:773 #19 0x00000000007b200c in exec_execute_message (max_rows=9223372036854775807, portal_name=0x14ed51d1f038 "") at postgres.c:2030 #20 PostgresMain (argc=<optimized out>, argv=argv@entry=0x14ed51d6d088, dbname=0x14ed51d6d068 "db_name", username=<optimized out>) at postgres.c:4298 #21 0x00000000004cf2ae in BackendRun (port=0x14ed51dfa380) at postmaster.c:4791 #22 BackendStartup (port=0x14ed51dfa380) at postmaster.c:4458 #23 ServerLoop () at postmaster.c:1930 #24 0x0000000000739d58 in PostmasterMain (argc=argc@entry=9, argv=argv@entry=0x14ed51c246f0) at postmaster.c:1557 #25 0x00000000004d1594 in main (argc=9, argv=0x14ed51c246f0) at main.c:228 [14:53:43][root][~]$ On Mon, May 6, 2019 at 2:33 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > > We are using PG 10.6. We have one cron job that queries pg_stat_activity > > table to find out how many queries are running longer than X minutes and > > generate metrics. > > > Query look like this : > > SELECT * FROM pg_stat_activity WHERE state='active' > > > After some days, this query get stuck and doesn't finish. We tried to run > > this query manually and same result. > > > We looked into pg_locks table and there this query is not blocked on any > > lock : > > https://justpaste.it/48rpe > > Interesting. Can you get a stack trace to show where in the code it's > stuck? > > > https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Generating_a_stack_trace_of_a_PostgreSQL_backend > > regards, tom lane > -- ------------------------------------- Thanks Neeraj Kumar, +1 (206) 427-7267
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-08T18:12:56Z
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > Took some time to get stack trace as we didn't had root permission. > Attaching stack trace of two process (out of many) stuck for same query > below[1][2] Hmm, the line numbers in your stack traces don't agree with either v10 or HEAD branches for me. But assuming that you've correctly identified where it's stuck: > Seems like call is unable to come out of this loop : > https://github.com/postgres/postgres/blob/master/src/backend/postmaster/pgstat.c#L3361-L3400 the only really obvious theory is that some process left its st_changecount odd, which would more or less have to imply that something threw an error between pgstat_increment_changecount_before and pgstat_increment_changecount_after. There's only one place where that seems very plausible, namely pgstat_bestart, which is doing a rather scary amount of stuff in between. Are you using either SSL or GSS? regards, tom lane
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> — 2019-05-08T21:21:06Z
Yes we use SSL to connect to DB. Looked into code related to st_changecount : https://github.com/postgres/postgres/blob/659e53498c3c04e4f400323c02bef98fe8d13ec8/src/include/pgstat.h#L1015-L1044 From comment seems like each backend should have its own copy of PgBackendStatus, it means st_changecount should be different for each process. If st_changecount was corrupted for 1/2 process, how can it impact newly created process. So could you please help to understand then how come if we run new query via new console (means new process) that also is getting stuck. On Wed, May 8, 2019 at 11:12 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > > Took some time to get stack trace as we didn't had root permission. > > Attaching stack trace of two process (out of many) stuck for same query > > below[1][2] > > Hmm, the line numbers in your stack traces don't agree with either v10 > or HEAD branches for me. But assuming that you've correctly identified > where it's stuck: > > > Seems like call is unable to come out of this loop : > > > https://github.com/postgres/postgres/blob/master/src/backend/postmaster/pgstat.c#L3361-L3400 > > the only really obvious theory is that some process left its > st_changecount odd, which would more or less have to imply that > something threw an error between pgstat_increment_changecount_before > and pgstat_increment_changecount_after. There's only one place > where that seems very plausible, namely pgstat_bestart, which is > doing a rather scary amount of stuff in between. Are you using > either SSL or GSS? > > regards, tom lane > -- ------------------------------------- Thanks Neeraj Kumar, +1 (206) 427-7267
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-08T21:58:52Z
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > Yes we use SSL to connect to DB. Hm. I'm suspicious that one of the functions that fetch data for an SSL connection threw an error. In particular, it doesn't look to be hard at all to make X509_NAME_to_cstring fall over --- an encoding conversion failure would do it, even without any stretchy assumptions about OOM this early in backend start. Have you got any SSL certificates floating around with non-ASCII subject name or issuer name? > From comment seems like each backend should have its own copy > of PgBackendStatus, it means st_changecount should be different for each > process. If st_changecount was corrupted for 1/2 process, how can it impact > newly created process. So could you please help to understand then how come > if we run new query via new console (means new process) that also is > getting stuck. No, that field is in shared memory. The easiest way to get it reset would be to restart the postmaster. It's possible you could do it without that, by starting enough sessions so that one of them takes up the broken pg_stat_activity slot. regards, tom lane
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
Jeremy Schneider <schnjere@amazon.com> — 2019-05-09T19:46:32Z
On 5/8/19 14:58, Tom Lane wrote: > neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: >> Yes we use SSL to connect to DB. > > Hm. I'm suspicious that one of the functions that fetch data for > an SSL connection threw an error. In particular, it doesn't look > to be hard at all to make X509_NAME_to_cstring fall over --- an > encoding conversion failure would do it, even without any stretchy > assumptions about OOM this early in backend start. Have you got > any SSL certificates floating around with non-ASCII subject name > or issuer name? Crazy timing. We just had a report come in from a database in the RDS fleet that's hitting this same issue. It was one of the Aurora systems, but there wasn't anything Aurora-specific that I could see in the relevant bits of code. Seems to me that at a minimum, this loop shouldn't go on forever. Even having an arbitrary, crazy high, hard-coded number of attempts before failure (like a million) would be better than spinning on the CPU forever - which is what we are seeing. Would be even cooler to detect and correct a broken slot in PgBackendStatus... if I have a good idea I'll post/try it. :) -Jeremy -- Jeremy Schneider Database Engineer Amazon Web Services
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-09T20:00:52Z
Jeremy Schneider <schnjere@amazon.com> writes: > Seems to me that at a minimum, this loop shouldn't go on forever. Even > having an arbitrary, crazy high, hard-coded number of attempts before > failure (like a million) would be better than spinning on the CPU > forever - which is what we are seeing. I don't think it's the readers' fault. The problem is that the writer is violating the protocol. If we put an upper limit on the number of spin cycles on the reader side, we'll just be creating a new failure mode when a writer gets swapped out at the wrong moment. IMO we need to (a) get the failure-prone code out of the critical section, and then (b) fix the pgstat_increment_changecount macros so that the critical sections around these shmem changes really are critical sections (ie bump CritSectionCount). That way, if somebody makes the same mistake again, at least there'll be a pretty obvious failure rather than a lot of stuck readers. regards, tom lane
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> — 2019-05-09T23:35:37Z
We got more information about this issue. There is one backend process still present into beentry which has changecount as odd value. However this process is long gone/terminated. It means when this process was killed/terminated its entry was not cleaned from beentry list. There seems to be some shutdown hook which cleans beentry if process is killed/terminated that somehow was not kicked off ? These are some of the fields of corrupted beentry entry which is still hanging : st_changecount = 1407, st_procpid = 0, st_backendType = B_BACKEND, st_proc_start_timestamp = 610236763633421, st_xact_start_timestamp = 0, st_clienthostname = 0x9000023d480 "", st_ssl = 1 '\001', st_sslstatus = 0x90000c60f80, st_state = STATE_IDLEINTRANSACTION_ABORTED, On Thu, May 9, 2019 at 1:00 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > Jeremy Schneider <schnjere@amazon.com> writes: > > Seems to me that at a minimum, this loop shouldn't go on forever. Even > > having an arbitrary, crazy high, hard-coded number of attempts before > > failure (like a million) would be better than spinning on the CPU > > forever - which is what we are seeing. > > I don't think it's the readers' fault. The problem is that the > writer is violating the protocol. If we put an upper limit on > the number of spin cycles on the reader side, we'll just be creating > a new failure mode when a writer gets swapped out at the wrong moment. > > IMO we need to (a) get the failure-prone code out of the critical > section, and then (b) fix the pgstat_increment_changecount macros > so that the critical sections around these shmem changes really are > critical sections (ie bump CritSectionCount). That way, if somebody > makes the same mistake again, at least there'll be a pretty obvious > failure rather than a lot of stuck readers. > > regards, tom lane > -- ------------------------------------- Thanks Neeraj Kumar, +1 (206) 427-7267
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-10T03:25:01Z
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > We got more information about this issue. There is one backend process > still present into beentry which has changecount as odd value. However this > process is long gone/terminated. It means when this process was > killed/terminated its entry was not cleaned from beentry list. There seems > to be some shutdown hook which cleans beentry if process is > killed/terminated that somehow was not kicked off ? No, that's the point: there isn't any such cleanup code. The design idea here was that we'd only have short straight-line code segments with no possible way to throw an error while changecount is odd. Then somebody abused the heck out of that ... regards, tom lane
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> — 2019-05-10T03:34:37Z
Tom, may be I didn't make my point clear. There are two issues : 1) Why this value was left as odd 2) Why backend entry is still pending in beentry for backend process even after it was killed/terminated. I am talking about 2nd issue. My understanding is query on pg_stat_activity goes via all backend entries via beentry and it finds this wrong/corrupted entry. When a process terminates, ideally this backend entry into beentery should have also been cleaned. But why this still there? Whose responsibility it is to remove entry from beentry when process terminates ? May be that part is broken? Ideally this issue should have stayed till this process was active. If entry from beentry would have been removed after process was killed, system should have auto recovered. On Thu, May 9, 2019 at 8:25 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > > We got more information about this issue. There is one backend process > > still present into beentry which has changecount as odd value. However > this > > process is long gone/terminated. It means when this process was > > killed/terminated its entry was not cleaned from beentry list. There > seems > > to be some shutdown hook which cleans beentry if process is > > killed/terminated that somehow was not kicked off ? > > No, that's the point: there isn't any such cleanup code. The design > idea here was that we'd only have short straight-line code segments > with no possible way to throw an error while changecount is odd. > Then somebody abused the heck out of that ... > > regards, tom lane > -- ------------------------------------- Thanks Neeraj Kumar, +1 (206) 427-7267
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-10T04:29:18Z
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > Tom, may be I didn't make my point clear. > There are two issues : > 1) Why this value was left as odd Because a function called by pgstat_bestart threw an error, is what I'm guessing. > 2) Why backend entry is still pending in beentry for backend process even > after it was killed/terminated. > I am talking about 2nd issue. My understanding is query on pg_stat_activity > goes via all backend entries via beentry and it finds this wrong/corrupted > entry. When a process terminates, ideally this backend entry into beentery > should have also been cleaned. But why this still there? Whose > responsibility it is to remove entry from beentry when process terminates ? If you're imagining that something takes an electronic hacksaw to shared memory and physically removes that array entry, you're mistaken. It's still going to be there. Now, there *is* cleanup code --- this bit of pgstat_beshutdown_hook is supposed to mark the process's entry as not-in-use: /* * Clear my status entry, following the protocol of bumping st_changecount * before and after. We use a volatile pointer here to ensure the * compiler doesn't try to get cute. */ pgstat_increment_changecount_before(beentry); beentry->st_procpid = 0; /* mark invalid */ pgstat_increment_changecount_after(beentry); However, if something had left st_changecount odd before we got to this, it'd still be odd afterwards. Sure, st_procpid is now zero, but that doesn't help readers because they're not supposed to believe st_procpid is valid unless the changecount is even. You could maybe argue that this cleanup code should be trying to ensure that the changecount is left even, but I don't think that's an appropriate response. If it's not even when we get here, we already screwed up very badly, because we were breaking the protocol for (potentially) as long as the process has been in existence. Moreover, if you're worried about corner cases where we did mess that up, what of corner cases where process exit fails before getting here? I think the right answer is to bring the hammer down as soon as we mess up, which is what the critical-section mechanism is for. regards, tom lane
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> — 2019-05-10T15:01:25Z
There are multiple ways see this problem. One way I am seeing is : how system will auto-recover from this particular state. So ideally if st_procpid is set to zero it means this process is already terminated, however it might be have left some corrupted information in memory. So when other components tries to read beentry, they should also check if st_procpid is already set to zero, if yes it means this process is gone and no need to consider this process any more. Agree this is solving particular issue about pg_stat_activity however don't see any harm in adding that check. On Thu, May 9, 2019 at 9:29 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > > Tom, may be I didn't make my point clear. > > There are two issues : > > 1) Why this value was left as odd > > Because a function called by pgstat_bestart threw an error, is what > I'm guessing. > > > 2) Why backend entry is still pending in beentry for backend process even > > after it was killed/terminated. > > I am talking about 2nd issue. My understanding is query on > pg_stat_activity > > goes via all backend entries via beentry and it finds this > wrong/corrupted > > entry. When a process terminates, ideally this backend entry into > beentery > > should have also been cleaned. But why this still there? Whose > > responsibility it is to remove entry from beentry when process > terminates ? > > If you're imagining that something takes an electronic hacksaw to shared > memory and physically removes that array entry, you're mistaken. It's > still going to be there. Now, there *is* cleanup code --- this bit of > pgstat_beshutdown_hook is supposed to mark the process's entry as > not-in-use: > > /* > * Clear my status entry, following the protocol of bumping > st_changecount > * before and after. We use a volatile pointer here to ensure the > * compiler doesn't try to get cute. > */ > pgstat_increment_changecount_before(beentry); > > beentry->st_procpid = 0; /* mark invalid */ > > pgstat_increment_changecount_after(beentry); > > However, if something had left st_changecount odd before we got to this, > it'd still be odd afterwards. Sure, st_procpid is now zero, but that > doesn't help readers because they're not supposed to believe st_procpid > is valid unless the changecount is even. > > You could maybe argue that this cleanup code should be trying to ensure > that the changecount is left even, but I don't think that's an appropriate > response. If it's not even when we get here, we already screwed up very > badly, because we were breaking the protocol for (potentially) as long as > the process has been in existence. Moreover, if you're worried about > corner cases where we did mess that up, what of corner cases where process > exit fails before getting here? I think the right answer is to bring the > hammer down as soon as we mess up, which is what the critical-section > mechanism is for. > > regards, tom lane > -- ------------------------------------- Thanks Neeraj Kumar, +1 (206) 427-7267
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> — 2019-05-10T15:40:44Z
Also curious why query on pg_stat_activity is considering terminated process ? Irrespective of corrupted state or not, ideally query on pg_stat_activity should ignore already terminated process. My 2 cents. On Fri, May 10, 2019 at 8:01 AM neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> wrote: > There are multiple ways see this problem. One way I am seeing is : how > system will auto-recover from this particular state. > > So ideally if st_procpid is set to zero it means this process is already > terminated, however it might be have left some corrupted information in > memory. So when other components tries to read beentry, they should also > check if st_procpid is already set to zero, if yes it means this process > is gone and no need to consider this process any more. > > Agree this is solving particular issue about pg_stat_activity however > don't see any harm in adding that check. > > > On Thu, May 9, 2019 at 9:29 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > >> neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: >> > Tom, may be I didn't make my point clear. >> > There are two issues : >> > 1) Why this value was left as odd >> >> Because a function called by pgstat_bestart threw an error, is what >> I'm guessing. >> >> > 2) Why backend entry is still pending in beentry for backend process >> even >> > after it was killed/terminated. >> > I am talking about 2nd issue. My understanding is query on >> pg_stat_activity >> > goes via all backend entries via beentry and it finds this >> wrong/corrupted >> > entry. When a process terminates, ideally this backend entry into >> beentery >> > should have also been cleaned. But why this still there? Whose >> > responsibility it is to remove entry from beentry when process >> terminates ? >> >> If you're imagining that something takes an electronic hacksaw to shared >> memory and physically removes that array entry, you're mistaken. It's >> still going to be there. Now, there *is* cleanup code --- this bit of >> pgstat_beshutdown_hook is supposed to mark the process's entry as >> not-in-use: >> >> /* >> * Clear my status entry, following the protocol of bumping >> st_changecount >> * before and after. We use a volatile pointer here to ensure the >> * compiler doesn't try to get cute. >> */ >> pgstat_increment_changecount_before(beentry); >> >> beentry->st_procpid = 0; /* mark invalid */ >> >> pgstat_increment_changecount_after(beentry); >> >> However, if something had left st_changecount odd before we got to this, >> it'd still be odd afterwards. Sure, st_procpid is now zero, but that >> doesn't help readers because they're not supposed to believe st_procpid >> is valid unless the changecount is even. >> >> You could maybe argue that this cleanup code should be trying to ensure >> that the changecount is left even, but I don't think that's an appropriate >> response. If it's not even when we get here, we already screwed up very >> badly, because we were breaking the protocol for (potentially) as long as >> the process has been in existence. Moreover, if you're worried about >> corner cases where we did mess that up, what of corner cases where process >> exit fails before getting here? I think the right answer is to bring the >> hammer down as soon as we mess up, which is what the critical-section >> mechanism is for. >> >> regards, tom lane >> > > > -- > ------------------------------------- > Thanks > Neeraj Kumar, > +1 (206) 427-7267 > -- ------------------------------------- Thanks Neeraj Kumar, +1 (206) 427-7267
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-10T16:13:58Z
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > Also curious why query on pg_stat_activity is considering terminated > process ? The short answer to that is that this bug leaves shared memory in a corrupt state. It's not really useful to worry about whether readers should react differently to that --- you could spend endless amounts of time hypothesizing different kinds of corruption and endless amounts of code/cycles trying to work around it. But the right answer is to fix it on the writing side. regards, tom lane
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> — 2019-05-10T20:32:54Z
--> But the right answer is to fix it on the writing side. Yes I agree with this part. Even though there is very low probability, a process can still be killed in middle when writing. So what is your suggestion on how to recover from this automatically? On Fri, May 10, 2019 at 9:14 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > > Also curious why query on pg_stat_activity is considering terminated > > process ? > > The short answer to that is that this bug leaves shared memory in > a corrupt state. It's not really useful to worry about whether > readers should react differently to that --- you could spend endless > amounts of time hypothesizing different kinds of corruption and > endless amounts of code/cycles trying to work around it. But the > right answer is to fix it on the writing side. > > regards, tom lane > -- ------------------------------------- Thanks Neeraj Kumar, +1 (206) 427-7267
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-11T02:57:20Z
neeraj kumar <neeru.cse@gmail.com> writes: > --> But the right answer is to fix it on the writing side. > Yes I agree with this part. Even though there is very low probability, a > process can still be killed in middle when writing. So what is your > suggestion on how to recover from this automatically? Here's a draft patch. This makes more cosmetic changes than are strictly necessary to fix the bug, but I'm concerned about preventing future mistakes of the same sort, not just dealing with the immediate bug. Anyway the idea here is (1) reduce the size of the critical section in pgstat_bestart where the changecount is odd, so that nothing except data copying happens there, and (2) adjust the macros for writing st_changecount so that those sections actually are critical sections. That means that if something throws an error inside those sections, it'll turn into a PANIC and database restart. That shouldn't ever happen, of course, but if it does then a PANIC is better than a frozen system. I renamed the macros for writing st_changecount to make it more apparent that those are now critical-section boundaries. The out-of-line string fields make the pgstat_bestart code more ticklish than one could wish, since they have to be treated differently from in-line fields. But I'm not sure there's much we can do to avoid that. It doesn't seem like a good idea to change the layout of the shared- memory structure, at least not in released branches. I found two other embarrassing bugs while I was at it. The stanza initializing st_backendType was clearly inserted with the aid of a dartboard, because it was actually before the initial st_changecount bump. That probably has little if any real-world impact, but it's still an indication of sloppy patching. And pgstat_read_current_status had not been taught to copy the st_gssstatus out-of-line structure to local storage, so that those values might fail to hold still while a transaction examines the pg_stat_activity data. That *is* a live bug. This patch is against HEAD --- I've not looked at how much adjustment it'll need for the back branches, but I'm sure there's some. regards, tom lane
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Re: Query on pg_stat_activity table got stuck
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-12T01:36:47Z
I wrote: > This patch is against HEAD --- I've not looked at how much adjustment > it'll need for the back branches, but I'm sure there's some. I've back-patched this now. If you want to test the patch, the v10-branch version is at https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git;a=commitdiff;h=c3d113136bbaa86fbf1edde7aaf70ba06a6166b7 regards, tom lane