> Not quite sure what you're getting at with "a file we don't fsync" - if > we don't, we don't care about durability anyway, no? Or do you mean > where we fsync in a different process?
Right. > Either way, the answer is mostly no: On NFS et al where close() implies > an fsync you'll get the error at that time, otherwise you'll get it at > the next fsync(). Thanks. The reason I ask is that if we got notified of already-detected writeback errors (on 4.13+) on close() too, it'd narrow the window a little for problems, since normal backends could PANIC if close() of a persistent file raised EIO. Otherwise we're less likely to see the error, since the checkpointer won't see it - it happened before the checkpointer open()ed the file. It'd still be no help for dirty writeback that happens after we close() in a user backend / the bgwriter and before we re-open(), but it'd be nice if the kernel would tell us on close() if it knows of a writeback error. -- Craig Ringer http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services