Hi Laurenze,
From the configuration we have, does it mean that the primary will retain 32 
WAL's of 1 GB each and then start evicting the first WAL as soon as the last 
one gets filled? In layman's term, 32GB is huge amount of data and I don't 
think that much changes during upgrades. In fact the total size of our database 
is 56 GB. Is my understanding correct?

shared_buffers = 48GB
wal_level = replica
max_prepared_transactions = 200
max_wal_senders = 5
wal_keep_segments = 32
hot_standby = ON
effective_cache_size = 144GB
work_mem = 1GB
maintenance_work_mem = 2GB
wal_buffers = 16MB
min_wal_size = 1GB
max_wal_size = 2GB

Thanks & Regards
Pranjal Shukla

On 3/17/22, 6:50 PM, "Laurenz Albe" <laurenz.a...@cybertec.at> wrote:

    On Thu, 2022-03-17 at 12:36 +0000, Shukla, Pranjal wrote:
    > uring upgrades of our application, we generally shutdown all Secondary 
servers
    > which are getting stream replicated from Primary Servers. This is to 
maintain
    > a copy of database on other servers should
    > we wish to revert (of course we take DB Backups too before starting the 
activity).
    > After the application upgrade is done, when we start the secondary, often 
the
    > replication is broken, and we need to
    > again setup using pg_basebackup. How do we ensure that secondary is able 
to
    > resume the replication without the need of base back up again?

    There are three ways:

    1. have a WAL archive and configure "restore_command" on the standby

    2. set "wal_keep_size" on the primary high enough

    3. use a replication slot

    Yours,
    Laurenz Albe
    -- 
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