On 6/6/24 15:19, Koen De Groote wrote:
I'll give them a read, though it might take a few weekends
Meanwhile, this seems to be what I'm looking for:
From
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/warm-standby.html#STREAMING-REPLICATION-SLOTS <https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/warm-standby.html#STREAMING-REPLICATION-SLOTS>
" Replication slots provide an automated way to ensure that the primary
does not remove WAL segments until they have been received by all
standbys, and that the primary does not remove rows which could cause a
recovery conflict
<https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/hot-standby.html#HOT-STANDBY-CONFLICT> even when the standby is disconnected."
I'm reading that as: "if there is a replication slot, if the standby is
disconnected, WAL is kept"
And if we know WAL is kept in the "pg_wal" directory, that sounds like
it could slowly but surely fill up disk space.
But again, I'll give them a read. I've read all of logical replication
already, and I feel like I didn't get my answer there.
It would be a good idea to provide an a fairly specific outline of what
you are trying to achieve, then it would be easier for folks to offer
suggestions on what to do or not to do.
Thanks for the help
Regards,
Koen De Groote
--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@aklaver.com