From dfbaed459754e71e01bb0cc90a12802bba3f9786 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> Date: Tue, 28 Apr 2015 00:12:38 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Use a fd opened for read/write when syncing slots during startup. Some operating systems, including the reporter's windows, return EBADFD or similar when fsync() is invoked on a O_RDONLY file descriptor. Unfortunately RestoreSlotFromDisk() does exactly that; which causes failures after restarts in at least some scenarios. If you hit the bug the error message will be something like ERROR: could not fsync file "pg_replslot/$name/state": Bad file descriptor Simply use O_RDWR instead of O_RDONLY when opening the relevant file descriptor to fix the bug. Unfortunately I have no way of verifying the fix, but we've seen similar problems in the past. This bug goes back to 9.4 where slots were introduced. Backpatch accordingly. Reported-By: Patrice Drolet Bug: #13143: Discussion: 20150424101006.2556.60897@wrigleys.postgresql.org --- src/backend/replication/slot.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/src/backend/replication/slot.c b/src/backend/replication/slot.c index fa1f07b3f3e..d2e18423746 100644 --- a/src/backend/replication/slot.c +++ b/src/backend/replication/slot.c @@ -1092,7 +1092,7 @@ RestoreSlotFromDisk(const char *name) elog(DEBUG1, "restoring replication slot from \"%s\"", path); - fd = OpenTransientFile(path, O_RDONLY | PG_BINARY, 0); + fd = OpenTransientFile(path, O_RDWR | PG_BINARY, 0); /* * We do not need to handle this as we are rename()ing the directory into -- GitLab