Обсуждение: Postgresql 11: terminating walsender process due to replication timeout
I have found some questions about the same error, but didn't find any of them answering my problem.
The setup is that I have two Postgres11 clusters (A and B) and they are making use of publication and subscription features to copy data from A to B.
A (source DB- publication) --------------> B (target DB - subscription)
This works fine, but often (not always) when the data volume being inserted on a table in node A increases, it gives the following error.
"terminating walsender process due to replication timeout"
The data volume at the moment being entered is about 30K rows per second continuously for hours through COPY
command.
Earlier the wal_sender_timeout
was set to 5 sec and I would see this error much often. I then increased it to 1 min and the frequency of this error reduced. But I don't want to keep increasing it without understanding what is causing it. I looked at the code of walsender.c
and know the exact lines where it's coming from.
But I am still not clear which parameter is making the sender assume that the receiver node is inactive and therefore it should stop the wal_sender
.
Can anyone please suggest what changes I should make to remove this error?
sourcedb=# show wal_sender_timeout; wal_sender_timeout
-------------------- 1min
(1 row)
sourcedb=# select * from pg_replication_slots; slot_name | plugin | slot_type | datoid | database | temporary | active | active_pid | xmin | catalog_xmin | restart_lsn | confirmed_flush_lsn
------------------------------------+----------+-----------+--------+----------+-----------+--------+------------+------+--------------+----------------+--------------------
- sub_target_DB | pgoutput | logical | 16501 | sourcedb | f | t | 68229 | | 98839088 | 116D0/C36886F8 | 116D0/C3E5D370
targetdb=# show wal_receiver_timeout; wal_receiver_timeout
---------------------- 1min
(1 row)
targetdb=# show wal_retrieve_retry_interval ; wal_retrieve_retry_interval
----------------------------- 5s
(1 row)
targetdb=# show wal_receiver_status_interval; wal_receiver_status_interval
------------------------------ 2s
(1 row)
targetdb=# select * from pg_stat_subscription; subid | subname | pid | relid | received_lsn | last_msg_send_time | last_msg_receipt_time | latest_end_lsn | l
atest_end_time
------------+------------------------------------+-------+-------+----------------+-------------------------------+-------------------------------+----------------+---------
---------------------- 2378695757 | sub_target_DB | 62371 | | 116D1/2BA8F170 | 2021-08-20 09:05:15.398423+09 | 2021-08-20 09:05:15.398471+09 | 116D1/2BA8F170 | 2021-08-
20 09:05:15.398423+09
Increased the wal_sender_timeout
to 5 mins and the error started appearing more frequently instead. Not only that, it even killed the active subscription and stopped replicating data. Had to restart it. So clearly, just increasing the wal_sender_timeout
hasn't helped.
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Re: Postgresql 11: terminating walsender process due to replication timeout
At Thu, 9 Sep 2021 14:52:25 +0900, Abhishek Bhola <abhishek.bhola@japannext.co.jp> wrote in > I have found some questions about the same error, but didn't find any of > them answering my problem. > > The setup is that I have two Postgres11 clusters (A and B) and they are > making use of publication and subscription features to copy data from A to > B. > > A (source DB- publication) --------------> B (target DB - subscription) > > This works fine, but often (not always) when the data volume being inserted > on a table in node A increases, it gives the following error. > > "terminating walsender process due to replication timeout" > > The data volume at the moment being entered is about 30K rows per second > continuously for hours through COPY command. > > Earlier the wal_sender_timeout was set to 5 sec and I would see this error > much often. I then increased it to 1 min and the frequency of this error > reduced. But I don't want to keep increasing it without understanding what > is causing it. I looked at the code of walsender.c and know the exact lines > where it's coming from. > > But I am still not clear which parameter is making the sender assume that > the receiver node is inactive and therefore it should stop the wal_sender. > > Can anyone please suggest what changes I should make to remove this error? What minor-version is the Postgres server mentioned? PostgreSQL 11 have gotten the following fix at 11.6, which could be related to the trouble. https://www.postgresql.org/docs/11/release-11-6.html > Fix timeout handling in logical replication walreceiver processes > (Julien Rouhaud) > > Erroneous logic prevented wal_receiver_timeout from working in > logical replication deployments. The details of the fix is here. https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git;a=commit;h=3f60f690fac1bf375b92cf2f8682e8fe8f69098 > Fix timeout handling in logical replication worker > > The timestamp tracking the last moment a message is received in a > logical replication worker was initialized in each loop checking if a > message was received or not, causing wal_receiver_timeout to be ignored > in basically any logical replication deployments. This also broke the > ping sent to the server when reaching half of wal_receiver_timeout. regards. -- Kyotaro Horiguchi NTT Open Source Software Center
postgres (PostgreSQL) 11.6
At Thu, 9 Sep 2021 14:52:25 +0900, Abhishek Bhola <abhishek.bhola@japannext.co.jp> wrote in
> I have found some questions about the same error, but didn't find any of
> them answering my problem.
>
> The setup is that I have two Postgres11 clusters (A and B) and they are
> making use of publication and subscription features to copy data from A to
> B.
>
> A (source DB- publication) --------------> B (target DB - subscription)
>
> This works fine, but often (not always) when the data volume being inserted
> on a table in node A increases, it gives the following error.
>
> "terminating walsender process due to replication timeout"
>
> The data volume at the moment being entered is about 30K rows per second
> continuously for hours through COPY command.
>
> Earlier the wal_sender_timeout was set to 5 sec and I would see this error
> much often. I then increased it to 1 min and the frequency of this error
> reduced. But I don't want to keep increasing it without understanding what
> is causing it. I looked at the code of walsender.c and know the exact lines
> where it's coming from.
>
> But I am still not clear which parameter is making the sender assume that
> the receiver node is inactive and therefore it should stop the wal_sender.
>
> Can anyone please suggest what changes I should make to remove this error?
What minor-version is the Postgres server mentioned? PostgreSQL 11
have gotten the following fix at 11.6, which could be related to the
trouble.
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/11/release-11-6.html
> Fix timeout handling in logical replication walreceiver processes
> (Julien Rouhaud)
>
> Erroneous logic prevented wal_receiver_timeout from working in
> logical replication deployments.
The details of the fix is here.
https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git;a=commit;h=3f60f690fac1bf375b92cf2f8682e8fe8f69098
> Fix timeout handling in logical replication worker
>
> The timestamp tracking the last moment a message is received in a
> logical replication worker was initialized in each loop checking if a
> message was received or not, causing wal_receiver_timeout to be ignored
> in basically any logical replication deployments. This also broke the
> ping sent to the server when reaching half of wal_receiver_timeout.
regards.
--
Kyotaro Horiguchi
NTT Open Source Software Center
This correspondence (including any attachments) is for the intended recipient(s) only. It may contain confidential or privileged information or both. No confidentiality or privilege is waived or lost by any mis-transmission. If you receive this correspondence by mistake, please contact the sender immediately, delete this correspondence (and all attachments) and destroy any hard copies. You must not use, disclose, copy, distribute or rely on any part of this correspondence (including any attachments) if you are not the intended recipient(s).
Re: Postgresql 11: terminating walsender process due to replication timeout
At Thu, 9 Sep 2021 16:06:25 +0900, Abhishek Bhola <abhishek.bhola@japannext.co.jp> wrote in > sourcedb:~$ postgres --version > postgres (PostgreSQL) 11.6 > > Sorry for missing this information. > But looks like this fix is already included in the version I am running. Ok. I'm not sure but there may be a case where too-busy (or too poor relative to the publisher) subscriber cannot send a response for a long time. Usually keep-alive packets sent from publisher causes subscriber response even while busy time but it seems that if subscriber applies changes more than two times slower than the publisher sends, subscriber doesn't send a response in the timeout window. regards. -- Kyotaro Horiguchi NTT Open Source Software Center
At Thu, 9 Sep 2021 16:06:25 +0900, Abhishek Bhola <abhishek.bhola@japannext.co.jp> wrote in
> sourcedb:~$ postgres --version
> postgres (PostgreSQL) 11.6
>
> Sorry for missing this information.
> But looks like this fix is already included in the version I am running.
Ok. I'm not sure but there may be a case where too-busy (or too poor
relative to the publisher) subscriber cannot send a response for a
long time. Usually keep-alive packets sent from publisher causes
subscriber response even while busy time but it seems that if
subscriber applies changes more than two times slower than the
publisher sends, subscriber doesn't send a response in the timeout
window.
regards.
--
Kyotaro Horiguchi
NTT Open Source Software Center
This correspondence (including any attachments) is for the intended recipient(s) only. It may contain confidential or privileged information or both. No confidentiality or privilege is waived or lost by any mis-transmission. If you receive this correspondence by mistake, please contact the sender immediately, delete this correspondence (and all attachments) and destroy any hard copies. You must not use, disclose, copy, distribute or rely on any part of this correspondence (including any attachments) if you are not the intended recipient(s).
Re: Postgresql 11: terminating walsender process due to replication timeout
At Fri, 10 Sep 2021 16:55:48 +0900, Abhishek Bhola <abhishek.bhola@japannext.co.jp> wrote in > So is there any solution to this issue? > I did try to increase the wal_sender_timeout and it broke the pub/sub. > I increased the wal_receiver_timeout and it wouldn't attempt to restart the > subscription until that time elapsed. > Due to that, the WAL segments got removed by the time it came up again and > it stopped working. > So given that the publisher is publishing at a higher rate than the > subscriber is subscribing, what can be done? Given that my assumption is right, to enable a subscriber to send a response, the subscriber needs to see a keepalive packet from publisher (sent with intervals of wal_sender_timeout/2) within every interval of wal_sender_timeout. Otherwise needs to "rest" by finding a gap in the data stream from the publisher with intervals shorter than wal_sender_timeout. The reason subscriber is kept busy is it receives the next data before it finishes applying the previous data. So possible workaround I came up with for now are: - Increase processing power of the subscriber, so as to increase the possibility that it can finish applying changes before the next data block comes from the publisher. Or, to make the subscriber can keep catching up to the publisher. This is the most appropriate solution, I think. - Throttle network bandwidth to obtain the same effect to the first reason above. (This may give a side effect that the bandwidth become finally insufficient.) - Break large transactions on the publisher into smaller pieces. Publisher sends data of a transaction at once at transaction commit, so this could average data transfer rate. - If you are setting *sufficient* logical_decoding_work_mem for such problematic large transactions, *decreasing* it might mitigate the issue. Lower logical_decoding_work_mem cause transaction data spill out to disk and the spilled data on disk could be sent at slower rate than on-memory data. Of course this is in exchange with total performance. - Streaming mode of logical replication introduced in PostgreSQL 14 might be able to mitigate the problem. It starts sending transaction data before the transaction completes. I'm not sure this is "fixed" for 13 or earlier, because a straight forward resolution surely decreases maximum processing rate at subscriber. > On Fri, Sep 10, 2021 at 9:26 AM Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > At Thu, 9 Sep 2021 16:06:25 +0900, Abhishek Bhola < > > abhishek.bhola@japannext.co.jp> wrote in > > > sourcedb:~$ postgres --version > > > postgres (PostgreSQL) 11.6 > > > > > > Sorry for missing this information. > > > But looks like this fix is already included in the version I am running. > > > > Ok. I'm not sure but there may be a case where too-busy (or too poor > > relative to the publisher) subscriber cannot send a response for a > > long time. Usually keep-alive packets sent from publisher causes > > subscriber response even while busy time but it seems that if > > subscriber applies changes more than two times slower than the > > publisher sends, subscriber doesn't send a response in the timeout > > window. regards. -- Kyotaro Horiguchi NTT Open Source Software Center