At Wed, 1 Sep 2021 12:48:51 +0200, <o.lepretre@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in > Hi, > > > > Looking at WAL folder after a crash, I noticed that new files after > restarting overwrite the more recent files before the crash and not the > oldest, which was what I expected. > > Is that normal ? I got only one file marked .deleted. Does that happens > when a WAL file hase been completed updated in the database and if then > while all oldest files aren't marked .deleted after restarting ? > > > Example : > > Crash occurs Aug 31 22:03 which is the more recent Wal file, the oldest file > is Aug 30 17:20 (and 105 files between those two) > > After restarting Aug 30 17:20 is still there, Aug 31 22:03 disappeared, one > new file is Sep 1 12:15 marked .deleted (restarting date) and one new Sep 1 > 12:36 which I guess is normal. Right now, I see an new wal file and the > previous one marked .deleted which is ok. > > Why are the oldest wal files still there ?? Can I remove them ? > > Hope I'm clear enough and thanks for explanations, It would be very helpful you gave us the name of the files. Due to WAL file recycling, timestamps are frequently shuffled aginst names. In any case, no WAL files ought to be manually removed. If you don't need the recycled-for-future files that much, consider reducing min_wal_size. If you looked the files only in timestamp order, with a high odds, the "oldest" file is a recycled file to be used in future, and the "newest" file is the currently written one. If so, the reason that the oldest-in-timestamp file is still there is it is still waiting to be used. Even if you removed the to-be-used-in-future files, such files would increase to the same extent according to the setting of min_wal_size. regards. -- Kyotaro Horiguchi NTT Open Source Software Center