On 16 September 2011 16:41, Ian Harding <harding.ian@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 8:35 AM, hubert depesz lubaczewski > <depesz@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 08:02:31AM -0700, Ian Harding wrote: >>> Oracle has a configuration option for its version of hot standby >>> (DataGuard) that lets you specify a time based delay in applying logs. >>> They get transferred right away, but changes in them are only applied >>> as they reach a certain age. The idea is that if something horrible >>> happens on the master, you can keep it from propagating to one or more >>> of your standby databases (or keep from having to reinstate one in the >>> case of a failover) >>> >>> Anyway, Is there any plan to add a knob like that to the streaming >>> replication in Postgres? >> >> In streaming - no. But if you want delay, perhaps normal WAL-files based >> approach would be good enough? OmniPITR, for one, has a option to delay >> applying wal segments. >> > > The file based approach is pretty close, unless the Bad Thing happens > right before a file gets transferred. This is not a super important > feature to me but It's a nice security blanket and almost takes the > place of a PITR plan including big file transfers of the data > directory at regular intervals. You could always ship the log to a waiting directory on the destination server, then run a command like this every few mins: find /holding/dir -maxdepth 1 -mtime +1 -exec mv '{}' /actual/dir/ ';' That particular command would move all files over a day old to the directory the standby is looking at. Or change +1 to +1h to leave a gap of an hour instead of a day. -- Thom Brown Twitter: @darkixion IRC (freenode): dark_ixion Registered Linux user: #516935 EnterpriseDB UK: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general