Andres, Thank you for diagnosing this problem!
On Thu, 2013-04-04 at 16:53 +0200, Andres Freund wrote: > I think the route you quickly sketched is more realistic. That would > remove all knowledge obout XLOG_HINT from generic code hich is a very > good thing, I spent like 15minutes yesterday wondering whether the early > return in there might be the cause of the bug... I like this approach. It may have some performance impact though, because there are a couple extra spinlocks taken, and an extra memcpy. The code looks good to me except that we should be consistent about the page hole -- XLogCheckBuffer is calculating it, but then we copy the entire page. I don't think anything can change the size of the page hole while we have a shared lock on the buffer, so it seems OK to skip the page hole during the copy. Another possible approach is to drop the lock on the buffer and re-acquire it in exclusive mode after we find out we'll need to do XLogInsert. It means that MarkBufferDirtyHint may end up blocking for longer, but would avoid the memcpy. I haven't really thought through the details. Regards, Jeff Davis -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers