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PostgreSQL Replication, Second Edition

You're reading from  PostgreSQL Replication, Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783550609
Pages 322 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters close

PostgreSQL Replication Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Understanding the Concepts of Replication 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

Understanding Linux-HA


The Linux-HA stack is built from a set of modular components that provide services. The major parts of this stack are the messaging layer (Corosync), the cluster manager (Pacemaker), application adaptor scripts (resource agents), fencing adaptors for STONITH (fence agents), and command-line tools for configuring all of this (pcs). The details on how this stack is put together have varied over time and across distributions, so if you are using an older distribution, you might have some differences compared to what is being described here. For newer distributions, the digital world seems to be stabilizing and you shouldn't have major differences.

Corosync

The Corosync messaging layer is responsible for knowing which nodes are up and part of the clusters, handling reliable communications between nodes, and storing the cluster state in a reliable and consistent in-memory database.

Corosync uses a shared key for communications, which you need to generate when setting up your...

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