and...@anarazel.de (Andres Freund) writes: > Looking at the page lsn's with dd I noticed something peculiar:
> page 0: > 01 00 00 00 18 c2 00 31 => 1/3100C218 > page 1: > 01 00 00 00 80 44 01 31 => 1/31014480 > page 10: > 01 00 00 00 60 ce 05 31 => 1/3105ce60 > page 43: > 01 00 00 00 58 7a 16 31 => 1/31167a58 > page 44: > 01 00 00 00 f0 99 16 31 => 1/311699f0 > page 45: > 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 => 0/0 > page 90: > 01 00 00 00 90 17 1d 32 => 1/321d1790 > page 91: > 01 00 00 00 38 ef 1b 32 => 1/321bef38 > So we have written out pages that are after pages without a LSN that > have an LSN thats *beyond* the point XLOG has successfully been written > to disk (1/31169A38)? If you're looking into the FPIs, those would contain the page's older LSN, not the one assigned by the current WAL record. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers