Making use of replication slots
After that introduction to synchronous replication and dynamically adjustable durability, I want to focus on a feature called replication slots.
What is the purpose of a replication slot? Let’s consider the following example – there is a master and a slave. On the master, a large transaction is executed, and the network connection is not fast enough to ship all data in time. At some point, the master removes its transaction log (checkpoint). If the slave is too far behind, a resync is needed. As we have already seen, the wal_keep_segments
setting can be used to reduce the risk of failing replication. The question is this – what is the best value for the wal_keep_segments
setting? Sure, more is better, but how much is best?
Replication slots will solve this problem for us – if we are using a replication slot, a master can only recycle the transaction log once it has been consumed by all replicas. The advantage here is...