Hi Atul,

Please do not cross-post over mailing lists.

As per your problem:

on a streaming replication setup, all changes applied to master are propagated 
to standby(s).

If standby is stopped or cannot temporary reach master, then it will pick up 
changes when started or when can reach master again, given that the initial 
state was in sync with the master.

What stated here above is always true, but there are cases in which too many 
changes are pushed to master and standby is not able to pick them up.

In order for standby to pick the missing data, is fundamental that the WAL 
files containing the changes are available to standby or in alternative 
wal_keep_segments is 'large enough'.

A good starting point to debug the situation are the logfiles of standby 
server, together with pg_stat_replication table.


Also handy to run on master:

SELECT pg_current_xlog_location() and on standby: select 
pg_last_xlog_receive_location() to understand if it is picking up. 
Documentation is always a good starting point to understand what is going on. 
If you did not already, have a look here: 
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.6/static/runtime-config-replication.html Hope 
it helps, Fabio


On 14/06/18 07:28, Atul Kumar wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have postgres edb 9.6 version, i have below query to solve it out.
>
> i have configured streaming replication having master and slave node
> on same  server just to test it.
>
> All worked fine but when i made slave service stop, and create some
> test databases in master, after then i made slave service start, slave
> didn't pick the changes.
>
> The replication was on async state.
>
> Then after doing some search on google i tried to make it sync state
> but even making changes in postgresql.conf file I am neither getting
> sync state nor getting any changes on slave server.
>
> Please suggest the needful.
>
>
> Regards,
> Atul
>


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