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authorTom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>2015-07-09 13:22:23 -0400
committerTom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>2015-07-09 13:22:23 -0400
commit193e0270752b07f8d0700710a39c4ec367f57339 (patch)
tree596081bcbe00e8846137a07528e2c3b359f8bace /src/backend/commands/policy.c
parent19a65458159ca5f46d8ac154e62273fa2a8cf13f (diff)
Fix postmaster's handling of a startup-process crash.
Ordinarily, a failure (unexpected exit status) of the startup subprocess should be considered fatal, so the postmaster should just close up shop and quit. However, if we sent the startup process a SIGQUIT or SIGKILL signal, the failure is hardly "unexpected", and we should attempt restart; this is necessary for recovery from ordinary backend crashes in hot-standby scenarios. I attempted to implement the latter rule with a two-line patch in commit 442231d7f71764b8c628044e7ce2225f9aa43b67, but it now emerges that that patch was a few bricks shy of a load: it failed to distinguish the case of a signaled startup process from the case where the new startup process crashes before reaching database consistency. That resulted in infinitely respawning a new startup process only to have it crash again. To handle this properly, we really must track whether we have sent the *current* startup process a kill signal. Rather than add yet another ad-hoc boolean to the postmaster's state, I chose to unify this with the existing RecoveryError flag into an enum tracking the startup process's state. That seems more consistent with the postmaster's general state machine design. Back-patch to 9.0, like the previous patch.
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