On 2020/09/08 19:28, Magnus Hagander wrote:


On Tue, Sep 8, 2020 at 8:10 AM Amit Kapila <amit.kapil...@gmail.com 
<mailto:amit.kapil...@gmail.com>> wrote:

    We use the timestamp of the global statfile if we are not able to
    determine it for a particular database either because the entry for
    that database doesn't exist or there is an error while reading the
    specific database entry. This was not taken care of while reading
    other entries like ArchiverStats or SLRUStats. See
    pgstat_read_db_statsfile_timestamp. I have observed this while
    reviewing Sawada-San's patch related to logical replication stats [1].

    I think this can only happen if due to some reason the statfile got
    corrupt or we
    have some bug in stats writing code, the chances of both are rare and even
    if that happens we will use stale statistics.

    The attached patch by Sawada-San will fix this issue. As the chances of this
    the problem is rare and nobody has reported any issue related to this,
    so it might be okay not to backpatch this.

    Thoughts?


Why are we reading the archiver statis and and slru stats in 
"pgstat_read_db_statsfile_timestamp" in the first place?

Maybe because they are written before database stats entries? That is,
to read the target database stats entry and get the timestamp from it,
we need to read (or lseek) all the global stats entries written before them.


That seems well out of scope for that function.

If nothing else the comment at the top of that function is out of touch with 
reality. We do seem to read it into local buffers and then ignore the contents. 
I guess we're doing it just to verify that it's not corrupt -- so perhaps the 
function should actually have a different name than it does now, since it 
certainly seems to do more than actually read the statsfile timestamp.

Specifically in this patch it looks wrong -- in the case of say the SLRU stats 
being corrupt, we will now return the timestamp of the global stats file even 
if there is one existing for the database requested, which definitely breaks 
the contract of the function.

Yes.
We should return false when fread() for database entry fails, instead? That is,

1. If corrupted stats file is found, the function always returns false.
2. If the file is not currupted and the target database entry is found, its 
timestamp is returned.
3. If the file is not corrupted and the target is NOT found, the timestamp of 
global entry is returned.

Regards,


--
Fujii Masao
Advanced Computing Technology Center
Research and Development Headquarters
NTT DATA CORPORATION


Reply via email to