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Re: Synchronous replication + pgPool: not all transactions immediately visible on standby

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I think your problem is not relevant to pgpool-II.

PostgreSQL's "synchronous" replication is actually not synchronous
(it's confusing but the naming was developer's decision). Primary
server sends the committed transaction's WAL record to standby and
wait for it is written to the standby's WAL file (and synched to the
disk if synchronous_commit = on). Then report to the client "the
transaction has been committed". That means if you send query on the
just committed row to the standby, it may returns an old row because
WAL record may replay yet.

If you dislike the PostgreSQL's behavior, you may want to try
pgpool-II's "native replication mode" (set replication_mode = on and
master_slave_mode = off). In the mode, pgpool-II does not return
response to the client until all PostgreSQL returns a commit
response. Thus right after the commit, querying to any PostgreSQL
should return committed row immediately.

Note that there's a small updating delay between PostgreSQL A and B.
So there's small window where data on A and B are differ.

Postgres-XC (or Postgres-XL which is a fork of Postgres-XC) overcomes
the issue by using "global transaction management" technique.

Best regards,
--
Tatsuo Ishii
SRA OSS, Inc. Japan
English: http://www.sraoss.co.jp/index_en.php
Japanese:http://www.sraoss.co.jp

> Hello,
> 
> we have a setup with Postgres 9.3.4 running on Ubuntu (don't know the exact version) using streaming replication with a hot standby and pgPool 3.3.3 as a loadbalancer in front of the two Postgres servers.
> 
> While running automated tests we noticed that despite the fact that replication is set to synchronous not all committed transactions are immediately visible on the standby. 
> 
> The tests are Java programs using JPA (EclipseLink) to access the database.
> 
> The basic pattern is something like this:
> 
> * tests opens a new JPA sessions
> * updates a table
> * commits the transaction
> * closes the JPA session
> * opens a new JPA session (this is where it gets transferred to the slave)
> * selects the modified data to verify everything
> * closes the JPA session
> 
> If the commit and the following select are issued too quickly, the select doesn't see the changes. 
> 
> If we either connect directly to the master to run the tests, or artificially sleep inside the tests (e.g. 100ms) then we can see the results of a previous transaction without problems. All connections use the default isolation level (read committed).
> 
> We enabled statement logging on the master and the server, and these are the relevant parts 
> 
> Log on the on the master:
> 
>   2014-09-24 09:13:24.774 CEST LOG:  Execute <unnamed>: SET extra_float_digits = 3
>   2014-09-24 09:13:24.797 CEST LOG:  Execute <unnamed>: BEGIN
>   2014-09-24 09:13:24.869 CEST LOG:  Execute <unnamed>: UPDATE xxxx SET STATUS = $1 WHERE some_col IN (.....)
>   2014-09-24 09:13:24.869 CEST DETAIL:  Parameter: $1 = '2', ........  $2001 = '1999'
>   2014-09-24 09:13:25.060 CEST LOG:  Execute S_1: COMMIT
>   2014-09-24 09:13:25.120 CEST LOG:  Anweisung:  DISCARD ALL
> 
> Log on the slave:
> 
>   2014-09-24 09:13:25.125 CEST LOG:  Execute <unnamed>: SET extra_float_digits = 3
>   2014-09-24 09:13:25.131 CEST LOG:  Execute <unnamed>: BEGIN
>   2014-09-24 09:13:25.133 CEST LOG:  Execute <unnamed>: SELECT ... FROM xxxx WHERE ... AND (STATUS = $3) LIMIT $4 OFFSET $5
>   2014-09-24 09:13:25.133 CEST DETAIL:  Parameter: $1 = '1000426553', $2 = '2014-09-24 09:14:18.114', $3 = '2', $4 = '2100', $5 = '0'
>   2014-09-24 09:13:25.137 CEST LOG:  Execute S_1: COMMIT
>   2014-09-24 09:13:25.138 CEST LOG:  Anweisung:  DISCARD ALL
> 
> So the new session on the slave was initiated 65ms after the commit on the master was done. 
> But still the SELECT didn't return anything (the where clause includes the new values for the STATUS column updated in the previous transaction).
> 
> The IN clause of the UPDATE statement contains 2000 values. If we reduce the number of updated rows (e.g. to 20) things are working fine. 
> Everything sounds as if the replication is configured to be asynchronous, although it isn't
> 
> Here are some of the configuration settings that I can imagine would be important:
> 
> postgresql.conf (from the master)
> 
>   wal_level = hot_standby
>   checkpoint_segments = 16
>   checkpoint_completion_target = 0.9
>   max_wal_senders = 5
>   wal_keep_segments = 50
>   synchronous_standby_names = 'test_slave'
>   
> 
> The following entries are unchanged from a default configuration (they are still commented out)
> 
>   #fsync = on
>   #synchronous_commit = on
>   #wal_sync_method = fsync
>   #full_page_writes = on
>   #wal_buffers = -1
>   #wal_writer_delay = 200ms
>   #commit_delay = 0
>   #commit_siblings = 5
> 
> The slave has 
> 
>   hot_standby = on
>   hot_standby_feedback = on
> 
> pgpool.conf
> 
>   num_init_children = 400
>   max_pool = 2
>   child_life_time = 300
>   child_max_connections = 0
>   connection_life_time = 0
>   client_idle_limit = 0
>   connection_cache = on
>   reset_query_list = 'ABORT; DISCARD ALL'
> 
>   replication_mode = off
>   replicate_select = off
>   insert_lock = on
> 
>   load_balance_mode = on
>   master_slave_mode = on
>   master_slave_sub_mode = 'stream'
>   sr_check_period = 0
>   parallel_mode = off
>   use_watchdog = off
>   memory_cache_enabled = off
> 
> Our assumption is that it has something to do with the hot standby and/or the pgPool configuration. 
> But we are unsure where exactly the problem is. 
> 
> This is our first time using pgPool (this is a pre-configured system from our customer) and we are unsure on where to look further.
> 
> Regards
> Thomas
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
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