On Wednesday, April 06, 2016 10:33:16 AM Lars Arvidson wrote: > > I'd guess it's probably more like option 3 - Glusterfs ate my database. > > Hi, thanks for your reply! > We do archive logs on a distributed Glusterfs volume in case the streaming > replication gets too far behind and the transaction logs have been removed. > Would a restore of a corrupt archived log file give the symptoms we are > seeing? Would not Postgresql detect that the logfile was corrupt? Are there > some way I can analyze archived logs files to see if this is the problem? > If it's just storing the logs, I doubt it's the cause of the problem. You can ignore my message. I had too much fun fighting with Gluster recently. I reread your original full post, and the one thing that stuck out for me was "the clusters are now replicating from each other". I feel like that could be a problem. But someone more intimate with the replication might want to input on that. Other than that, I wonder if you just have a hardware problem with your storage. -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general