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PostgreSQL Replication, Second Edition

You're reading from   PostgreSQL Replication, Second Edition Leverage the power of PostgreSQL replication to make your databases more robust, secure, scalable, and fast

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783550609
Length 322 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding the Concepts of Replication FREE CHAPTER 2. Understanding the PostgreSQL Transaction Log 3. Understanding Point-in-time Recovery 4. Setting Up Asynchronous Replication 5. Setting Up Synchronous Replication 6. Monitoring Your Setup 7. Understanding Linux High Availability 8. Working with PgBouncer 9. Working with pgpool 10. Configuring Slony 11. Using SkyTools 12. Working with Postgres-XC 13. Scaling with PL/Proxy 14. Scaling with BDR 15. Working with Walbouncer Index

Conflict management


In PostgreSQL, the streaming replication data flows in one direction only. The XLOG is provided by the master to a handful of slaves, which consume the transaction log and provide you with a nice copy of the data. You might wonder how this could ever lead to conflicts. Well, there can be conflicts.

Consider the following scenario: as you know, data is replicated with a very small delay. So, the XLOG ends up at the slave after it has been made on the master. This tiny delay can cause the scenario shown in the following diagram:

Let's assume that a slave starts to read a table. It is a long read operation. In the meantime, the master receives a request to actually drop the table. This is a bit of a problem, because the slave will still need this data to perform its SELECT statement. On the other hand, all the requests coming from the master have to be obeyed under any circumstances. This is a classic conflict.

Tip

In the event of a conflict, PostgreSQL will issue the Terminating...

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