On 1/11/24 6:17 PM, Antonin Bas wrote:
Hi all,
I have a use case for which I am considering using Postgres Logical
Replication, but I would like to scale up to 100 or even 200
replication slots.
I have increased max_wal_senders and max_replication_slots to 100 (also
making sure that max_connections is large enough). Things seem to be
working pretty well so far based on some PoC code I have written.
Postgres is creating a walsender process for each replication slot, as
expected, and the memory footprint of each one is around 4MB.
So I am quite happy with the way things are working, but I am a bit
uneasy about increasing these configuration values by 10-20x compared to
their defaults (both max_wal_senders and max_replication_slots default
to 10).
Is there anything I should be looking out for specifically? Is it
considered an anti-pattern to use that many replication slots and
walsender processes? And, when my database comes under heavy write load,
will walsender processes start consuming a large amount of CPU / memory
(I recognize that this is a vague question, I am still working on some
empirical testing).
The biggest issue with logical decoding (what drives logical
replication) is that every subscriber has to completely decode
everything for it's publication, which can be extremely memory intensive
under certain circumstances (long running transacitons being one
potential trigger). Decoders also have to read through all WAL traffic,
regardless of what their publication is set to - everything runs of the
single WAL stream.
Note that this only applies to actually decoding - simply having a large
number of slots isn't much of an issue. Even having a large number of
subscribers that aren't consuming isn't a resource issue (though it IS
an issue for MVCC / vacuuming!) - to test you need to have all the
decoders that you expect to support.
Ultimately, I'd be concerned with trying to support 100+ slots unless
you know that your change rate isn't super high and that you don't have
long-running transactions.
--
Jim Nasby, Data Architect, Austin TX