src/backend/replication/README Walreceiver - libpqwalreceiver API ---------------------------------- The transport-specific part of walreceiver, responsible for connecting to the primary server and receiving WAL files, is loaded dynamically to avoid having to link the main server binary with libpq. The dynamically loaded module is in libpqwalreceiver subdirectory. The dynamically loaded module implements three functions: bool walrcv_connect(char *conninfo, XLogRecPtr startpoint) Establish connection to the primary, and starts streaming from 'startpoint'. Returns true on success. bool walrcv_receive(int timeout, unsigned char *type, char **buffer, int *len) Retrieve any message available through the connection, blocking for maximum of 'timeout' ms. If a message was successfully read, returns true, otherwise false. On success, a pointer to the message payload is stored in *buffer, length in *len, and the type of message received in *type. The returned buffer is valid until the next call to walrcv_* functions, the caller should not attempt freeing it. void walrcv_disconnect(void); Disconnect. This API should be considered internal at the moment, but we could open it up for 3rd party replacements of libpqwalreceiver in the future, allowing pluggable methods for receiveing WAL. Walreceiver IPC --------------- When the WAL replay in startup process has reached the end of archived WAL, recoverable using recovery_command, it starts up the walreceiver process to fetch more WAL (if streaming replication is configured). Walreceiver is a postmaster subprocess, so the startup process can't fork it directly. Instead, it sends a signal to postmaster, asking postmaster to launch it. Before that, however, startup process fills in WalRcvData->conninfo, and initializes the starting point in WalRcvData->receivedUpto. As walreceiver receives WAL from the master server, and writes and flushes it to disk (in pg_xlog), it updates WalRcvData->receivedUpto. Startup process polls that to know how far it can proceed with WAL replay. Walsender IPC ------------- At shutdown, postmaster handles walsender processes differently from regular backends. It waits for regular backends to die before writing the shutdown checkpoint and terminating pgarch and other auxiliary processes, but that's not desirable for walsenders, because we want the standby servers to receive all the WAL, including the shutdown checkpoint, before the master is shut down. Therefore postmaster treats walsenders like the pgarch process, and instructs them to terminate at PM_SHUTDOWN_2 phase, after all regular backends have died and bgwriter has written the shutdown checkpoint. When postmaster accepts a connection, it immediately forks a new process to handle the handshake and authentication, and the process initializes to become a backend. Postmaster doesn't know if the process becomes a regular backend or a walsender process at that time - that's indicated in the connection handshake - so we need some extra signaling to let postmaster identify walsender processes. When walsender process starts up, it marks itself as a walsender process in the PMSignal array. That way postmaster can tell it apart from regular backends. Note that no big harm is done if postmaster thinks that a walsender is a regular backend; it will just terminate the walsender earlier in the shutdown phase. A walsenders will look like a regular backends until it's done with the initialization and has marked itself in PMSignal array, and at process termination, after unmarking the PMSignal slot. Each walsender allocates an entry from the WalSndCtl array, and advertises there how far it has streamed WAL already. This is used at checkpoints, to avoid recycling WAL that hasn't been streamed to a slave yet. However, that doesn't stop such WAL from being recycled when the connection is not established. Walsender - walreceiver protocol -------------------------------- See manual.
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.. | ||
libpqwalreceiver | ||
.gitignore | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
basebackup.c | ||
repl_gram.y | ||
repl_scanner.l | ||
walreceiver.c | ||
walreceiverfuncs.c | ||
walsender.c |