Project

General

Profile

How To Configure Warm Standby with PITRTools » History » Version 24

Ivan Lezhnjov, 05/07/2013 09:45 AM

1 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
{{toc}}
2
3 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
h1. How To Configure Warm Standby with pitrtools
4 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
5 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
This how-to demonstrates how to configure a warm standby using PostgreSQL 8.4 and pitrtools.
6 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
7 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
h1. What Is pitrtools and Why Would You Want To Use It?
8 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
9 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Essentially, pitrtools is a wrapper around standard tools, such as rsync and PostgreSQL's internal functionality, that makes, among other things, creating and managing standby configurations and subsequent failover to a standby a snap.
10 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
11 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
With the help of pitrtools you could do more, namely:
12 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
* secure shipping of log files to configured standby server over SSL protected link;
13
* streaming replication;
14
* enable/disable archiving without the need to restart PostgreSQL;
15
* stay informed by generating alerts based on various levels of severity of events happening during the process on both ends of configuration;
16
* automatically take a base backup, including table spaces, restore archives and purge old ones (if PostgreSQL >8.3);
17
* failover to the latest restore point and point-in-time recovery (restore using timestamps);
18
* etc.
19
20 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Obviously, pitrtools attempts to make things simpler, more secure and easier to manage.
21 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
22
h1. Naming Conventions
23
24
Master server can be referred to also as archiver.
25
Slave is often called standby.
26
27
These names are used interchangeably.
28
29
h1. The Test Setup
30
31 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
It's a good idea to first setup pitrtools and play with it before you actually go ahead and change configuration of your production servers. To show how pitrtools is configured and work, I'll describe the entire process using a 2 hosts test setup as an example.
32 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
33
So, there are 2 hosts named @bitarena@ and @bitarena-clone@, both being virtualized instances of Debian Squeeze. I assume you're experienced enough to install Debian yourself and know how to find your way around the system.
34
35 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
@bitarena@ is designated role of master server aka archiver, @bitarena-clone@ is a slave aka standby server. pitrtools is installed on both hosts, but each host uses different tools from the package.
36 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
37
h1. The Process
38
39 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
These are major steps in actual order of execution that one would have to follow to get pitrtools-enabled setup running:
40 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
41
On master server
42
43
		* Turn on archiving
44 21 Ivan Lezhnjov
		* Install helper scripts
45 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
		* @cmd_archiver -C $CONFIG -I@
46
47
On slave server
48
49
		* @cmd_standby -C $CONFIG -I@
50
		* @cmd_standby -C $CONFIG -B@
51
		* @cmd_standby -C $CONFIG -S@
52
53 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
h1. Installing and Configuring pitrtools
54 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
55 23 Ivan Lezhnjov
If your system doesn't have a package for pitrtools download a tarball from pitrtools project page at https://public.commandprompt.com/projects/pitrtools/wiki.
56 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
57 24 Ivan Lezhnjov
Installing pitrtools is a matter of unpacking an archive file. The recommended default is `postgres' home directory.
58
59
You can put it anywhere in your filesystem as long as the files belong to and can be accessed by `postgres'.
60 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
61 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
h1. SSH Key-based Login for pitrtools
62 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
63 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
pitrtools relies on rsync and SSH heavily to do its work, e.g. making a base backup and shipping WAL log files from master to slave server -- all that happens over an SSL-protected communication channel. This is the area where pitrtools makes one's life easier, because otherwise you'd have to find a way to copy log files to a slave server somehow (most likely it would be some sort of networking mount point).
64 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
65 5 Ivan Lezhnjov
Therefore one of the prerequisites is to configure SSH key-based logins between the two hosts for @postgres@ system user that don't require a password or a passphrase.
66 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
67
*Master*
68
<pre>root@bitarena:~# su - postgres
69
70
postgres@bitarena:~$ ssh-keygen -t rsa
71
... 
72
postgres@bitarena:~$ ls -la /var/lib/postgresql/.ssh/
73
total 16
74
drwx------ 2 postgres postgres 4096 Sep 28 09:17 .
75
drwxr-xr-x 5 postgres postgres 4096 Sep 28 09:17 ..
76
-rw------- 1 postgres postgres 1675 Sep 28 09:17 id_rsa
77
-rw-r--r-- 1 postgres postgres  399 Sep 28 09:17 id_rsa.pub
78
postgres@bitarena:~#
79
</pre>
80
81
*Slave*
82
<pre>root@bitarena-clone:~# su - postgres
83
postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ ssh-keygen -t rsa
84
... </pre>
85
86
Answer all the questions and ssh-keygen will create both private and public (*.pub file) RSA keys. For now just create the key pair, one on on each host (master and slave). When done, proceed to exchanging public keys between the hosts like this:
87
88
*Master*
89 18 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena:~$ ssh-copy-id bitarena-clone
90
Now try logging into the machine, with "ssh 'bitarena-clone'", and check in:
91 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
92 18 Ivan Lezhnjov
  .ssh/authorized_keys
93 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
94 18 Ivan Lezhnjov
to make sure we haven't added extra keys that you weren't expecting.
95 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
96
postgres@bitarena:~$ ssh bitarena-clone
97 18 Ivan Lezhnjov
Linux bitarena-clone 2.6.32-5-686 #1 SMP Sun May 6 04:01:19 UTC 2012 i686
98 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
99
The programs included with the Debian GNU/Linux system are free software;
100
the exact distribution terms for each program are described in the
101
individual files in /usr/share/doc/*/copyright.
102
103
Debian GNU/Linux comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY, to the extent
104
permitted by applicable law.
105 18 Ivan Lezhnjov
Last login: Thu Oct 18 06:07:22 2012 from bitarena.localdomain
106
postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ less .ssh/authorized_keys
107
postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ </pre>
108 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
109 18 Ivan Lezhnjov
This will copy @postgres@ system user's public SSH key on master to standby into a file @authorized_keys@, which will allow @postgres@ on master to login to slave host without a password and also in a secure fashion.
110 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
111 19 Ivan Lezhnjov
Remember that this has been done on master server only. In a similar manner, you should take care of the slave host.
112 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
113 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
It's worth noting that pitrtools runs some actions remotely. For example, when a base backup action is run on a slave host, cmd_standby script establishes SSH session to a master host and runs various psql commands to deal with checkpoints, copy log files, etc. This also requires PostgreSQL user password to access the database, and it is often needed to be entered 4 and more times for a base backup action to complete. 
114 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
115 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Once you played around with pitrtools enough to get hang of things, you could avoid having to enter password manually each time by either using .pgpass file (which is a "standard feature of PostgreSQL":http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.4/static/libpq-pgpass.html) or make sure there's a "trust relationship configured for localhost in @pg_hba.conf@ file":http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.4/static/auth-methods.html.
116 19 Ivan Lezhnjov
117
For the sake of clarity, consider these examples:
118
119
.pgpass
120
<pre>
121
127.0.0.1:*:postgres:postgres:postgrespass
122
</pre>
123
124
pg_hba.conf
125
<pre>
126
host postgres postgres 127.0.0.1/32 trust
127
</pre>
128 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
129
In the console output examples you're going to see below I entered password manually, but this, of course, is really inconvenient in production environment.
130
131
h1. Master Configuration File
132
133 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Sample configuration files are pretty good as they are with the defaults they come. Chances are you're not going to change a lot in there. Make sure you read all *.README files, though, because they contain helpful extra information about pitrtools and configuration parameters that will help you decide how to best configure your servers.
134 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
135 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
We start with the master host by editing pitrtools configuration file for master/archiver.
136 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
137 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena:~$ vim pitrtools/cmd_archiver.ini
138 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
	
139
	[DEFAULT]
140
	; online or offline
141
	state: online					
142
	
143
	; The base database directory
144
	
145
	pgdata: /var/lib/postgresql/8.4/main
146
	
147
	; where to remotely copy archives
148
	r_archivedir: /var/lib/postgresql/archive
149
	
150
	; where to locally copy archives
151
	l_archivedir: /var/lib/postgresql/archive
152
	
153
	; where is rsync				
154
	rsync_bin: /usr/bin/rsync			
155
	
156
	; extra rsync flags
157
	rsync_flags: -z
158
	
159
	; option 2 or 3, if running RHEL5 or similar it is likely 2
160
	; if you are running something that ships remotely modern software
161
	; it will be 3
162
	
163
	rsync_version = 3
164
	
165
	; IP of slave					
166
	slaves: bitarena-clone
167
	
168
	; the user that will be using scp				
169
	user: postgres				
170
	
171
	; if scp can't connect in 10 seconds error
172
	ssh_timeout: 10
173
	
174
	; command to process in ok					
175
	notify_ok: echo OK
176
	
177
	; command to process in warning
178
	notify_warning:  echo WARNING
179
	
180
	; command to process in critical
181
	notify_critical: echo CRITICAL
182
	
183
	; if you want to debug on/off only		 	
184
	debug: on
185
	
186
	; if you want ssh debug (warning noisy)
187
	ssh_debug: off
188
</pre>
189
190
191 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Note that you can use domain names instead of IP addresses for slaves: parameter, it works either way just fine. You might also want to turn debugging on while you're learning pitrtools. It helps to see what software does, if you try to understand better how it works.
192 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
193 11 Ivan Lezhnjov
h2. Turn On and Configure Archiving
194 1 Ivan Lezhnjov
195 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
If you are not using Streaming Replication / Hot Standby, we need to turn on archiving functionality in PostgreSQL. This is purely a PostgreSQL feature, but we can also take advantage of using pitrtools thanks to flexible design of PostgreSQL.
196 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
197
<pre>postgres@bitarena:~$ vim /etc/postgresql/8.4/main/postgresql.conf
198
199
...
200
archive_mode=on
201 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
archive_command = '/var/lib/postgresql/pitrtools/bin/cmd_archiver -C /var/lib/postgresql/pitrtools/cmd_archiver.ini -F %p'
202 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
...
203
</pre>
204
205
206 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Here we explicitly turn archiving mode on and tell PostgreSQL to use @cmd_archiver@, part of pitrtools, as the archiving command. 
207 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
It must be provided with a path to a configuration file (@-C@ switch), and a path to a log file (@-F@ switch). @%p@ is substituted by PostgreSQL with the actual log file location in the file system. To learn more about how to use @cmd_archiver@ run
208
209 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_archiver --help</pre>
210 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
211
212 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Please, keep in mind that pitrtools isn't supposed to be run by @root@ user. Technically, it can be run by any system user other than root, and unless you have a customized configuration your default PostgreSQL user will be @postgres@, so pitrtools are expected to be run as that system user.
213 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
214
Restart PostgreSQL for changes to take effect.
215
216
<pre>postgres@bitarena:~$ /etc/init.d/postgresql restart
217
Restarting PostgreSQL 8.4 database server: main.
218
postgres@bitarena:~#
219
</pre>
220
221 12 Ivan Lezhnjov
h2. Install Helper Scripts
222 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
223 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Apply cmd_standby.sql to the database of pitrtools user (usually @postgres@). This is required for master server only.
224 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
225 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>root@bitarena:~# psql -U postgres < ~/GIT/pitrtools/cmd_standby.sql
226 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
CREATE FUNCTION
227
COMMENT
228
CREATE FUNCTION
229
CREATE FUNCTION
230
CREATE FUNCTION
231
COMMENT
232
CREATE FUNCTION
233
COMMENT
234
root@bitarena:~#</pre>
235
236 13 Joshua Drake
>Note: If you are running Postgres 9.2, use cmd_standby.92.sql 
237 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
238 12 Ivan Lezhnjov
h2. Initialize Master Environment
239 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
240
At this point we're pretty much done configuring the master server. All that is left to do is initialize master environment by running
241
242 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_archiver -C pitrtools/cmd_archiver.ini -I
243 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
We are initializing queues, one moment.
244
245
NOTICE: init_env_func()
246
NOTICE: generate_slave_list_func()
247
NOTICE: Your slaves are: ['bitarena-clone']
248
postgres@bitarena:~$ ls -lah
249
total 40K
250
drwxr-xr-x  7 postgres postgres 4.0K Sep 28 10:25 .
251
drwxr-xr-x 34 root     root     4.0K Sep 27 02:32 ..
252
drwxr-xr-x  3 postgres postgres 4.0K Sep 24 15:10 8.4
253
drwx------  2 postgres postgres 4.0K Sep 27 02:23 .aptitude
254
drwxr-xr-x  3 postgres postgres 4.0K Sep 28 10:25 archive
255
-rw-------  1 postgres postgres 1001 Sep 28 10:03 .bash_history
256 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
drwxr-xr-x  2 postgres postgres 4.0K Sep 28 10:25 pitrtools
257 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
-rw-------  1 postgres postgres 1.4K Sep 28 05:08 .psql_history
258
drwx------  2 postgres postgres 4.0K Sep 28 09:29 .ssh
259
-rw-------  1 postgres postgres 3.6K Sep 28 10:25 .viminfo
260
postgres@bitarena:~$ ls -lah archive/bitarena-clone/
261
total 8.0K
262
drwxr-xr-x 2 postgres postgres 4.0K Sep 28 10:25 .
263
drwxr-xr-x 3 postgres postgres 4.0K Sep 28 10:25 ..
264
postgres@bitarena:~#</pre>
265
266
267
As you can see @-I@ switch tells @cmd_archiver@ to do a couple of internal actions, as well as prepare file system layout by creating necessary directories. 
268
269
@archive/@ directory has been created automatically by @cmd_archiver@ and contains sub-directory named after IP address or DNS name of a slave, @bitarena-clone@ in this example. This sub-directory is used in those circumstances when master fails to successfully transfer WAL log files to slave and stores them temporarily in this local directory. Once slave is back online, these files should be transferred to slave.
270
271
Effectively, after you've initialized master it starts trying to ship WAL files to slave. However, the slave host isn't configured yet, so the log delivery will fail and the log files should be found in @l_archivedir/slave_FQDNorIP/@ folder on master host. Once we configure slave, these will be shipped as soon as a new WAL segment is created on master.
272
273
274
h1. Slave aka Standby Server
275
276
Now we can prepare the slave host. SSH key-based login for @postgres@ system user should be working in both directions, from master to slave, as well as from slave to master.
277
278
Assuming you've arranged for this as it was suggested before, we can now go on and edit slave configuration file to perform first important step and initialize slave environment.
279
280 5 Ivan Lezhnjov
One of the configuration file parameters, namely @pgdata:@, will ask you to specify PostgreSQL data directory. You could look it up in @postgresql.conf@, or, If your PostgreSQL is already running, you could see this information like this:
281 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
282
<pre>root@bitarena:~# ps axuwf |grep postgre
283
root      4233  0.0  0.0   3304   756 pts/1    S+   10:56   0:00          \_ grep postgre
284
postgres  3352  0.0  0.4  46452  5464 ?        S    09:59   0:03 /usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/postgres 
285
-D /var/lib/postgresql/8.4/main -c config_file=/etc/postgresql/8.4/main/postgresql.conf
286
...</pre>
287
288
Remember, note down the path somewhere or copy it to the clipboard. We'll need it in a minute.
289
290 12 Ivan Lezhnjov
h2. Slave Configuration File
291 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
292
Now edit slave configuration file. Most defaults are good and safe options, but your setup may be different from what I have in this how-to. So, be careful to understand what you're doing.
293
294 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ vim pitrtools/cmd_standby.ini
295 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
	[DEFAULT]
296
	; what major version are we using?
297
	pgversion: 8.4
298
	
299
	; Used for 8.2 (8.1?), should be set to something > than checkpoint_segments on master				
300
	numarchives: 10			
301
	
302
	; Whether or not to use streaming replication.  If this is set to "on"
303 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
	; pitrtools will configure the standby server to replicate from master
304 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
	; using streaming replication.
305
	; This can only be used with PostgreSQL 9.0 and up.
306
	use_streaming_replication: off
307
	
308
	; File to touch to end replication when using streaming replication.
309 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
	trigger_file: /var/lib/postgresql/pitrtools/cmd_end_recovery
310 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
	
311
	; User to connect to master DB while using streaming replication,
312
	; ignored if not using streaming replication.
313
	repl_db_user: replication
314
	
315
	; Password for the user repl_db_user.
316
	repl_db_password: secret
317
	
318
	; sslmode to use when connecting for streaming replication. 
319
	; Accepted values: the same as libpq: disable, allow, prefer, require, verify-ca and verify-full
320
	; Default: sslmode: prefer
321
	sslmode: prefer
322
	
323
	; Commands needed for execution
324
	; absolute path to ssh
325
	ssh: /usr/bin/ssh		
326
	
327
	; absolute path to rsync
328
	rsync: /usr/bin/rsync
329
	
330
	; extra rsync flags
331
	rsync_flags: -z
332 17 Ivan Lezhnjov
333
	; Confs
334
335
	; This is the postgresql.conf to be used for the failover
336 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
	postgresql_conf_failover: /var/lib/postgresql/pitrtools/failover/postgesql.conf
337 17 Ivan Lezhnjov
338
	; This is the pg_hba.conf to be used for the failover
339 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
	pg_hba_conf_failover: /var/lib/postgresql/pitrtools/failover/pg_hba.conf
340 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
	
341
	; the path to to the postgres bin		
342
	pg_standby: /usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/pg_standby
343
	pg_ctl: /usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/pg_ctl
344
	
345
	; path to psql on the master
346
	r_psql: /usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/psql	
347
	
348
	; Generalized information
349
	
350
	; the port postgresql runs on (master)
351
	port: 5432
352
	
353
	; ip or name of master server 			
354
	master_public_ip: bitarena
355
	
356
	; the ip address we should use when processing remote shell		
357
	master_local_ip: 127.0.0.1
358
	
359
	; the user performed initdb	
360
	user: postgres
361
	
362
	; on or off			
363
	debug: on
364
	
365
	; on or off
366
	ssh_debug: off
367
	
368
	; the timeout for ssh before we throw an alarm
369
	ssh_timeout: 30			
370
	
371
	; should be the same as r_archivedir for archiver
372
	archivedir: /var/lib/postgresql/archive
373
	
374
	; where you executed initdb -D to	
375
	pgdata: /var/lib/postgresql/8.4/main
376
	
377
	; Confs
378
	
379
	; This is the postgresql.conf to be used when not in standby
380
	postgresql_conf: /etc/postgresql/8.4/main/postgresql.conf		
381
	
382
	; This is the pg_hba.conf to be used when not in standby
383
	pg_hba_conf: /etc/postgresql/8.4/main/pg_hba.conf		
384
	
385
	; By default postgresql.conf and pg_hba.conf will be copied from the
386
	; locations specified above to pgdata directory on failover.
387
	;
388
	; Uncomment the following to make postgres actually use the above conf
389
	; files w/o copying them to pgdata.
390
	;no_copy_conf: true
391
	
392
	; The recovery.conf file to create when starting up
393
	; Defaults to %(pgdata)/recovery.conf
394
	recovery_conf: /var/lib/postgresql/8.4/main/recovery.conf
395
	
396
	; Useful when postgresql.conf doesn't specify log destination
397
	; Will be passed with -l to pg_ctl when starting the server.
398
	;
399
	; If you're worried about having complete logs, either make sure
400
	; postgresql.conf points to a log file, or use the logfile: parameter.
401
	;
402
	; Otherwise postgresql will print on standard stdout and nothing
403
	; will be recorded in the logs
404
	;
405
	;logfile: /var/log/postgresql/postgresql.log
406
	
407
	; Alarms
408
	
409
	notify_critical: echo CRITICAL
410
	notify_warning: echo WARNING
411
	notify_ok: echo OK
412
	
413
	; On failover action
414
	
415
	; Whatever is placed here will be executed on -FS must return 0
416
	
417 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
	action_failover: /var/lib/postgresql/pitrtools/failover.sh</pre>
418 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
419
@action_failover:@ script has to exist and have permissions of at least chmod u+x equivalent, it could be just a placeholder script with a simple action of:
420
421
<pre>#!/bin/bash
422 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
touch /var/lib/postgresql/pitrtools/failover_happened</pre>
423 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
	
424 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
but it's meant as a way to let you do certain actions on failover, those would be very specific for each given setup. It's good to know, though, that pitrtools lets you take actions automatically when failover happens. Use this feature to make your setup more sophisticated.
425 17 Ivan Lezhnjov
426
In addition, when doing failover, there are two more additional options to take into consideration, namely @postgresql_conf_failover:@ and @pg_hba_conf_failover:@. Both allow you to start server on failover using alternative configuration. This is meant to provide users with a way to prepare their failover scenario configuration in advance.
427 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
428 12 Ivan Lezhnjov
h2. Initialize Slave Environment
429 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
430
First stop PostgreSQL, then initialize slave environment.
431
432
<pre>postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ /etc/init.d/postgresql stop
433 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_standby -C pitrtools/cmd_standby.ini -I
434 2 Ivan Lezhnjov
NOTICE: check_pgpid_func()
435
DEBUG: executing query /usr/bin/ssh -o ConnectTimeout=30 -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no  postgres@bitarena  "/usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/psql -A -t -Upostgres -p5432 -dpostgres -h127.0.0.1  by 'SELECT * FROM cmd_get_data_dirs()'
436
Password for user postgres: postgrespass
437
438
DEBUG: /var/lib/postgresql/8.4/main
439
postgres@bitarena-clone:~$</pre>
440
441 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Please, note that if @archivedir: /var/lib/postgresql/archive@ hasn't been created, you should do so manually as @postgres@ system user (or set @postgres@ user and group as the ownership information for this directory). pitrtools should do this automatically for you, but earlier versions were known not to do so. This is important, and the next step in slave configuration, which is base backup, will fail if @archivedir:@ doesn't exist.
442 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
443 12 Ivan Lezhnjov
h2. Making a Base Backup
444 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
445
Before you proceed check if @archivedir:@ exists on slave and WAL files are being shipped to it from master host. WAL files are generated and shipped only when new data is stored in the database on master host. To help simulate data flow and check whether archiving and shipping is happening, try this SQL statement on master host:
446
447
<pre>postgres@bitarena:~$ psql
448
psql (8.4.13)
449
Type "help" for help.
450
451 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
postgres=# create table testpitrtools1 as select * from pg_class, pg_description;
452 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
postgresq=# \q
453
postgres@bitarena:~$</pre>
454
	
455
You could create a couple of tables like that to generate enough WAL segments. See @archivedir:@ directory on slave to check whether any WAL files have been copied there. If they have, everything works as expected and you can try to make a base backup on slave host:
456
457 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_standby -C pitrtools/cmd_standby.ini -B
458 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
NOTICE: check_pgpid_func()
459
DEBUG: executing query /usr/bin/ssh -o ConnectTimeout=30 -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no  postgres@bitarena  "/usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/psql -A -t -Upostgres -p5432 -dpostgres -h127.0.0.1  by  'checkpoint' 
460
Password for user postgres: postgrespass
461
462
DEBUG: CHECKPOINT
463
DEBUG: executing query /usr/bin/ssh -o ConnectTimeout=30 -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no  postgres@bitarena  "/usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/psql -A -t -Upostgres -p5432 -dpostgres -h127.0.0.1  by  'SELECT cmd_pg_start_backup()' 
464
Password for user postgres: postgrespass
465
466
DEBUG: cmd_pg_start_backup:  1
467
DEBUG: executing query /usr/bin/ssh -o ConnectTimeout=30 -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no  postgres@bitarena  "/usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/psql -A -t -Upostgres -p5432 -dpostgres -h127.0.0.1  by 'SELECT * FROM cmd_get_data_dirs()'
468
Password for user postgres: postgrespass
469
470
DEBUG: executing query /usr/bin/ssh -o ConnectTimeout=30 -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no  postgres@bitarena  "/usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/psql -A -t -Upostgres -p5432 -dpostgres -h127.0.0.1  by 'SELECT * FROM cmd_get_pgdata() LIMIT 1'
471
Password for user postgres: postgrespass
472
473
receiving incremental file list
474
./
475
backup_label
476
backup_label.old
477
postmaster.opts
478
base/1/
479
base/1/pg_internal.init
480
base/11564/
481
base/11564/pg_internal.init
482
base/16499/
483
base/16499/pg_internal.init
484
base/33069/
485
base/33069/33084
486
base/33069/33268
487
base/33069/33974
488
base/33069/33974_fsm
489
base/33069/33974_vm
490
base/33069/33980
491
base/33069/33993
492
base/33069/33993_fsm
493
base/33069/33993_vm
494
base/33069/33999
495
base/33069/33999_fsm
496
base/33069/pg_internal.init
497
global/
498
global/pg_auth
499
global/pg_control
500
global/pg_database
501
pg_clog/0000
502
pg_multixact/offsets/0000
503
pg_stat_tmp/
504
pg_stat_tmp/pgstat.stat
505
pg_subtrans/0001
506
507
Number of files: 1537
508
Number of files transferred: 25
509
Total file size: 189868759 bytes
510
Total transferred file size: 22162037 bytes
511
Literal data: 920320 bytes
512
Matched data: 21241717 bytes
513
File list size: 20500
514
File list generation time: 0.004 seconds
515
File list transfer time: 0.000 seconds
516
Total bytes sent: 65011
517
Total bytes received: 189901
518
519
sent 65011 bytes  received 189901 bytes  101964.80 bytes/sec
520
total size is 189868759  speedup is 744.84
521
DEBUG: executing query /usr/bin/ssh -o ConnectTimeout=30 -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no  postgres@bitarena  "/usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/psql -A -t -Upostgres -p5432 -dpostgres -h127.0.0.1  by  'SELECT cmd_pg_stop_backup()' 
522
Password for user postgres: postgrespass
523
524
DEBUG: cmd_pg_stop_backup: 
525
postgres@bitarena-clone:~$</pre>
526
527 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
As you can see what happens is that pitrtools puts master into backup mode, synchronizes data directories (including tablespaces, if any) from master to slave and then exits backup mode on master. If base backup action had failed before it properly finished (say, you had lost connection to slave while rsync was copying files over to it), you'd need to intervene and run manually @-Astop_basebackup:@
528 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
529 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_standby -C pitrtools/cmd_standby.ini -Astop_basebackup
530 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
...</pre>
531
532
After that run base backup action again. Just make sure it finishes its work properly (use console output for successful base backup action above as a reference).
533
534 22 Ivan Lezhnjov
h2. Start a Standby
535
536 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
If you want a cold standby you're done. If you need a warm standby, then run:
537
538 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_standby -C pitrtools/cmd_standby.ini -S
539 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
NOTICE: check_pgpid_func()
540
server starting
541
postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ 2012-10-16 02:47:31 PDT LOG:  database system was interrupted; last known up at 2012-10-16 02:44:37 PDT
542
2012-10-16 02:47:31 PDT LOG:  starting archive recovery
543
2012-10-16 02:47:31 PDT LOG:  restore_command = '/usr/lib/postgresql/8.4/bin/pg_standby -s5 -w0 -c -d  /var/lib/postgresql/archive %f %p %r '
544
Trigger file 		: <not set>
545
Waiting for WAL file	: 00000001.history
546
WAL file path		: /var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000001.history
547
Restoring to		: pg_xlog/RECOVERYHISTORY
548
Sleep interval		: 5 seconds
549
Max wait interval	: 0 forever
550
Command for restore	: cp "/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000001.history" "pg_xlog/RECOVERYHISTORY"
551
Keep archive history	: 000000000000000000000000 and later
552
running restore		:cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000001.history': No such file or directory
553
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000001.history': No such file or directory
554
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000001.history': No such file or directory
555
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000001.history': No such file or directory
556
not restored
557
history file not found
558
Trigger file 		: <not set>
559
Waiting for WAL file	: 000000010000000100000025.00000020.backup
560
WAL file path		: /var/lib/postgresql/archive/000000010000000100000025.00000020.backup
561
Restoring to		: pg_xlog/RECOVERYHISTORY
562
Sleep interval		: 5 seconds
563
Max wait interval	: 0 forever
564
Command for restore	: cp "/var/lib/postgresql/archive/000000010000000100000025.00000020.backup" "pg_xlog/RECOVERYHISTORY"
565
Keep archive history	: 000000000000000000000000 and later
566
running restore		: OK
567
2012-10-16 02:48:01 PDT LOG:  restored log file "000000010000000100000025.00000020.backup" from archive
568
Trigger file 		: <not set>
569
Waiting for WAL file	: 000000010000000100000025
570
WAL file path		: /var/lib/postgresql/archive/000000010000000100000025
571
Restoring to		: pg_xlog/RECOVERYXLOG
572
Sleep interval		: 5 seconds
573
Max wait interval	: 0 forever
574
Command for restore	: cp "/var/lib/postgresql/archive/000000010000000100000025" "pg_xlog/RECOVERYXLOG"
575
Keep archive history	: 000000000000000000000000 and later
576
running restore		: OK
577
578
2012-10-16 02:48:02 PDT LOG:  restored log file "000000010000000100000025" from archive
579
2012-10-16 02:48:02 PDT LOG:  automatic recovery in progress
580
2012-10-16 02:48:02 PDT LOG:  redo starts at 1/25000020, consistency will be reached at 1/2504FFC4
581
2012-10-16 02:48:03 PDT LOG:  consistent recovery state reached
582
Trigger file 		: <not set>
583
Waiting for WAL file	: 000000010000000100000026
584
WAL file path		: /var/lib/postgresql/archive/000000010000000100000026
585
Restoring to		: pg_xlog/RECOVERYXLOG
586
Sleep interval		: 5 seconds
587
Max wait interval	: 0 forever
588
Command for restore	: cp "/var/lib/postgresql/archive/000000010000000100000026" "pg_xlog/RECOVERYXLOG"
589
Keep archive history	: 000000010000000100000025 and later
590
WAL file not present yet.
591
WAL file not present yet.
592
WAL file not present yet.
593
WAL file not present yet.
594
WAL file not present yet.
595
WAL file not present yet.
596
WAL file not present yet.
597
WAL file not present yet.
598
WAL file not present yet.
599
WAL file not present yet.</pre>
600
601 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
At this point PostgreSQL armed with pitrtools on master server will be continuously shipping log files to @archivedir:@ on slave. Once shipped, the WAL files will be immediately replayed, because slave in standby mode continuously scans @archivedir:@ for new WAL files and replays them as soon as they become available (this can be seen from example console output above).
602 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
603
h1. Failing Over
604
605 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Now you have a warm standby mirroring changes occurring on the master server. When your master server becomes unavailable due to any reason, you could turn this warm standby server into a production instance by simply running on standby machine a failover action as shown below. For this PostgreSQL on master must not be running, otherwise pitrtools will throw out a warning and refuse to failover.
606 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
607 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_standby -C pitrtools/cmd_standby.ini -F999
608 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
609
NOTICE: check_pgpid_func()
610
2012-10-16 02:56:20 PDT LOG:  received fast shutdown request
611
2012-10-16 02:56:20 PDT LOG:  aborting any active transactions
612
waiting for server to shut down....2012-10-16 02:56:20 PDT LOG:  shutting down
613
2012-10-16 02:56:20 PDT LOG:  database system is shut down
614
 done
615
server stopped
616
server starting
617
NOTICE: Statistics are not replicated in warm standy mode.
618
HINT: Execute ANALYZE on your databases
619
postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ 2012-10-16 02:56:22 PDT LOG:  database system was interrupted while in recovery at log time 2012-10-16 02:54:35 PDT
620
2012-10-16 02:56:22 PDT HINT:  If this has occurred more than once some data might be corrupted and you might need to choose an earlier recovery target.
621
2012-10-16 02:56:22 PDT LOG:  starting archive recovery
622
2012-10-16 02:56:22 PDT LOG:  restore_command = 'cp /var/lib/postgresql/archive/%f "%p"'
623
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000001.history': No such file or directory
624
2012-10-16 02:56:23 PDT LOG:  restored log file "000000010000000100000026" from archive
625
2012-10-16 02:56:23 PDT LOG:  automatic recovery in progress
626
2012-10-16 02:56:23 PDT LOG:  redo starts at 1/2635B428, consistency will be reached at 1/27000000
627
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/000000010000000100000027': No such file or directory
628
2012-10-16 02:56:23 PDT LOG:  could not open file "pg_xlog/000000010000000100000027" (log file 1, segment 39): No such file or directory
629
2012-10-16 02:56:23 PDT LOG:  redo done at 1/265AD744
630
2012-10-16 02:56:23 PDT LOG:  last completed transaction was at log time 2012-10-16 02:55:07.387709-07
631
2012-10-16 02:56:24 PDT LOG:  restored log file "000000010000000100000026" from archive
632
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000002.history': No such file or directory
633
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000003.history': No such file or directory
634
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000004.history': No such file or directory
635
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000005.history': No such file or directory
636
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000006.history': No such file or directory
637
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000007.history': No such file or directory
638
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000008.history': No such file or directory
639
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000009.history': No such file or directory
640
2012-10-16 02:56:24 PDT LOG:  selected new timeline ID: 9
641
cp: cannot stat `/var/lib/postgresql/archive/00000001.history': No such file or directory
642
2012-10-16 02:56:25 PDT LOG:  archive recovery complete
643
2012-10-16 02:56:26 PDT LOG:  database system is ready to accept connections
644
2012-10-16 02:56:26 PDT LOG:  autovacuum launcher started
645
646
postgres@bitarena-clone:~$</pre>
647
648
This will create @recovery.conf@ file under @pg_data:@ directory and restart PostgreSQL to enter production mode of operation.
649
650
After this, you'd be basically running a copy of production master server. Keep in mind that you would also need to change IP addresses and/or load balancing configuration, routing, firewall rules or anything else that might be in the way of establishing a successful connection to this host. This is where @action_failover:@ script could come in handy. 
651
652
Plan in advance, figure this all out to avoid any downtime before you will need to failover.
653
654
655 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
h1. Other things you could do with pitrtools and some tips
656 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
657 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
This how-to is meant to help you get started with pitrtools. pitrtools can do more, though, than just help you configure standby.
658 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
659
660
h2. Point-In-Time Recovery
661
662 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_standby -C pitrtools/cmd_standby.ini -F999 -R '2008-05-28 11:00:38.059389'
663 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
...</pre>
664
665
This is essentially a restore to a specific point in time action. In general, you can only restore to a point in time while using cold standby, because PITR will "stop" recovering at the point in time you've specified, and both warm and hot standby servers have already recovered all the WAL files they can. In this regard, it would be a good idea to have a cold standby around for disaster (at logical level) recovery.
666
667
Once this has been done, you can't choose another timestamp to restore to.
668
669
h2. Entering Standby Mode After Failover On Slave
670
671
Suppose you failed over to your standby slave, which is running now as a replacement of master for your applications. You've fixed problems with the actual master and want this slave host to enter standby mode again. Here's how you'd do it:
672
673 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_standby -C pitrtools/cmd_standby.ini -Astop
674 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
...</pre>
675
676
This will stop entire PostgreSQL service. You could also use PostgreSQL init script to achieve the same instead. If you need more fine-grained control use @pg_ctlcluser 8.4 main stop@ (see @man pg_ctlcluster@ for more details). Take a new base backup as before and enter standby mode:
677
678 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
<pre>postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_standby -C pitrtools/cmd_standby.ini -B
679 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
...
680
681 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
postgres@bitarena-clone:~$ pitrtools/bin/cmd_standby -C pitrtools/cmd_standby.ini -S
682 3 Ivan Lezhnjov
...</pre>
683
684
Again, if you want a cold standby just don't run -S action after -B.
685 4 Ivan Lezhnjov
686
h2. Alerts
687
688 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
Alerting is designed to run your custom scripts. You could easily integrate pitrtools alerting to your existing NMS be it Nagios, Zabbix, or anything else, send e-mails or take actions you decide.
689 4 Ivan Lezhnjov
690
h2. Logging
691
692
It bears repeating -- just In case you overlooked this in standby sample configuration file notes -- if your @postgresql.conf@ doesn't specify a log file to write to and you don't use @logfile:@ parameter in @cmd_standby.ini@ the output will be directed to stdout (your console) and nothing will ever be written to a log file on disk. 
693
694
If you restart PostgreSQL, that'll fix the problem, but you can avoid it in the first place by either specifying log file to write to in @postgresql.conf@ or by using @logfile:@ parameter in @cmd_standby.ini@.
695
696
h2. Troubleshooting
697
698
Set @debug:@ parameter in configuration files to @on@ and scrutinize the information. PostgreSQL log file is also a good place to look at.
699
700
h1. Getting Help
701
702 20 Ivan Lezhnjov
A very low-traffic mailing list for pitrtools can be found here http://lists.commandprompt.com/mailman/listinfo/pitrtools/
703 4 Ivan Lezhnjov
There is also consulting available from "Command Prompt":https://commandprompt.com/contact/