postgres/contrib/pg_standby
Tom Lane b09c248bdd Fix PGXS conventions so that extensions can be built against Postgres
installations whose pg_config program does not appear first in the PATH.
Per gripe from Eddie Stanley and subsequent discussions with Fabien Coelho
and others.
2007-06-26 22:05:04 +00:00
..
Makefile Fix PGXS conventions so that extensions can be built against Postgres 2007-06-26 22:05:04 +00:00
README.pg_standby Add /contrib/pg_standby: 2007-02-08 15:16:19 +00:00
pg_standby.c Fix PGXS conventions so that extensions can be built against Postgres 2007-06-26 22:05:04 +00:00

README.pg_standby

pg_standby README		2006/12/08 Simon Riggs

o What is pg_standby?

  pg_standby is a production-ready program that can be used to
  create a Warm Standby server. Other configuration is required
  as well, all of which is described in the main server manual.

  The program is designed to be a wait-for restore_command, 
  required to turn a normal archive recovery into a Warm Standby.
  Within the restore_command of the recovery.conf you could
  configure pg_standby in the following way:

    restore_command = 'pg_standby archiveDir %f %p'

  which would be sufficient to define that files will be restored
  from archiveDir. 

o features of pg_standby

  - pg_standby is written in C. So it is very portable
    and easy to install.

  - supports copy or link from a directory (only)

  - source easy to modify, with specifically designated
    sections to modify for your own needs, allowing 
    interfaces to be written for additional Backup Archive Restore
    (BAR) systems

  - portable: tested on Linux and Windows 

o How to install pg_standby

 $make
 $make install

o How to use pg_standby?

  pg_standby should be used within the restore_command of the
  recovery.conf file. See the main PostgreSQL manual for details.

  The basic usage should be like this:

    restore_command = 'pg_standby archiveDir %f %p'

  with the pg_standby command usage as

    pg_standby [OPTION]... [ARCHIVELOCATION] [NEXTWALFILE] [XLOGFILEPATH]

  When used within the restore_command the %f and %p macros
  will provide the actual file and path required for the restore/recovery.
  
o options

  pg_standby has number of options.

	-c
		use copy/cp command to restore WAL files from archive

	-d
		debug/logging option.

	-k numfiles
		Cleanup files in the archive so that we maintain no more
		than this many files in the archive. 

		You should be wary against setting this number too low,
		since this may mean you cannot restart the standby. This
		is because the last restartpoint marked in the WAL files
		may be many files in the past and can vary considerably.
		This should be set to a value exceeding the number of WAL
		files that can be recovered in 2*checkpoint_timeout seconds,
		according to the value in the warm standby postgresql.conf.
		It is wholly unrelated to the setting of checkpoint_segments
		on either primary or standby.

		If in doubt, use a large value or do not set a value at all.

	-l 
		use ln command to restore WAL files from archive
		WAL files will remain in archive

		Link is more efficient, but the default is copy to 
		allow you to maintain the WAL archive for recovery
		purposes as well as high-availability.

		This option uses the Windows Vista command mklink
		to provide a file-to-file symbolic link. -l will
		not work on versions of Windows prior to Vista.
		Use the -c option instead.
		see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTFS_symbolic_link

	-r maxretries
		the maximum number of times to retry the restore command if it
		fails. After each failure, we wait for sleeptime * num_retries
		so that the wait time increases progressively, so by default
		we will wait 5 secs, 10 secs then 15 secs before reporting
		the failure back to the database server. This will be
		interpreted as and end of recovery and the Standby will come
		up fully as a result.
		Default=3

	-s sleeptime
		the number of seconds to sleep between testing to see
		if the file to be restored is available in the archive yet.
		The default setting is not necessarily recommended,
		consult the main database server manual for discussion.
		Default=5

	-t triggerfile
		the presence of the triggerfile will cause recovery to end
		whether or not the next file is available
		It is recommended that you use a structured filename to 
		avoid confusion as to which server is being triggered
		when multiple servers exist on same system.
		e.g. /tmp/pgsql.trigger.5432

	-w maxwaittime
		the maximum number of seconds to wait for the next file,
		after which recovery will end and the Standby will come up.
		The default setting is not necessarily recommended,
		consult the main database server manual for discussion.
		Default=0

	Note: --help is not supported since pg_standby is not intended
		for interactive use, except during dev/test

o examples

	Linux

	archive_command = 'cp %p ../archive/%f'

    	restore_command = 'pg_standby -l -d -k 255 -r 2 -s 2 -w 0 -t /tmp/pgsql.trigger.5442 $PWD/../archive %f %p 2>> standby.log' 

  	which will
	- use a ln command to restore WAL files from archive
	- produce logfile output in standby.log
	- keep the last 255 full WAL files, plus the current one
	- sleep for 2 seconds between checks for next WAL file is full
	- never timeout if file not found
	- stop waiting when a trigger file called /tmp.pgsql.trigger.5442 appears

	Windows
	
	archive_command = 'copy %p ..\\archive\\%f'
	Note that backslashes need to be doubled in the archive_command, but
	*not* in the restore_command, in 8.2, 8.1, 8.0 on Windows.

	restore_command = 'pg_standby -c -d -s 5 -w 0 -t C:\pgsql.trigger.5442
..\archive %f %p 2>> standby.log'

  	which will
	- use a copy command to restore WAL files from archive
	- produce logfile output in standby.log
	- sleep for 5 seconds between checks for next WAL file is full
	- never timeout if file not found
	- stop waiting when a trigger file called C:\pgsql.trigger.5442 appears

o reported test success

	SUSE Linux 10.2
	Windows XP Pro