At Tue, 19 May 2020 22:39:20 +0530, Santhosh Kumar <krssanthosh@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in > Hi Community, > I read about "hot stand by" server and as far as the document goes, it > does not explicitly explain about, whether is it possible to configure more > than on database as a Hot stand by server. If we can configure more than > one hot stand by server, which database will take the role of master, in > case the original master instance crashes? Does a leader election happen? You can configure two or more standbys for one primary and cofigure some of or oall of them as synchronous standbys. Howerver, PostgreSQL doesn't choose the next-primary automatically. A replication cluster involving three or more servers can be configured in a couple of ways. You may configure them in a cascade replication chain, or in fanned-out configuration, or mixture of the two. If you made a cascaded replication set, you don't have a choice other than the first standby in the chain. before: [primary] - [standby 1] - [standby 2] ... after : [old standby 1] - [standby 2] ... If you made a fanned-out replication set. You can configure some of or all of them to be synchronous standbys, which is guaranteed to have the same data for all-commited transactions on the primary. If you configured priority-mode synchronous standbys, you can choose the next primary among the first n active standbys. If you didn't configured synchronous standbys, you would need to check up the all standbys and choose the most-"advanced" one. That is, the next primary is the standby having the largest receive-LSN. You need to reconstruct the replication set anyways. before: [primary] -+- [standby 1] LSN = x - 8 +- [standby 2] LSN = x - 2 <= the next primary +- [standby 3] LSN = x - 6 after : [old standby 2] -+- [standby 1] +- [standby 3] That is the same for the case of quorum-mode synchronous standbys setting. regards. -- Kyotaro Horiguchi NTT Open Source Software Center