# PgCat Configurations ## `general` Section ### host ``` path: general.host default: "0.0.0.0" ``` What IP to run on, 0.0.0.0 means accessible from everywhere. ### port ``` path: general.port default: 6432 ``` Port to run on, same as PgBouncer used in this example. ### enable_prometheus_exporter ``` path: general.enable_prometheus_exporter default: true ``` Whether to enable prometheus exporter or not. ### prometheus_exporter_port ``` path: general.prometheus_exporter_port default: 9930 ``` Port at which prometheus exporter listens on. ### connect_timeout ``` path: general.connect_timeout default: 1000 # milliseconds ``` How long the client waits to obtain a server connection before aborting (ms). This is similar to PgBouncer's `query_wait_timeout`. ### idle_timeout ``` path: general.idle_timeout default: 30000 # milliseconds ``` How long an idle connection with a server is left open (ms). ### server_lifetime ``` path: general.server_lifetime default: 86400000 # 24 hours ``` Max connection lifetime before it's closed, even if actively used. ### server_round_robin ``` path: general.server_round_robin default: false ``` Whether to use round robin for server selection or not. ### server_tls ``` path: general.server_tls default: false ``` Whether to use TLS for server connections or not. ### verify_server_certificate ``` path: general.verify_server_certificate default: false ``` Whether to verify server certificate or not. ### verify_config ``` path: general.verify_config default: true ``` Whether to verify config or not. ### idle_client_in_transaction_timeout ``` path: general.idle_client_in_transaction_timeout default: 0 # milliseconds ``` How long a client is allowed to be idle while in a transaction (ms). ### healthcheck_timeout ``` path: general.healthcheck_timeout default: 1000 # milliseconds ``` How much time to give the health check query to return with a result (ms). ### healthcheck_delay ``` path: general.healthcheck_delay default: 30000 # milliseconds ``` How long to keep connection available for immediate re-use, without running a healthcheck query on it ### shutdown_timeout ``` path: general.shutdown_timeout default: 60000 # milliseconds ``` How much time to give clients during shutdown before forcibly killing client connections (ms). ### ban_time ``` path: general.ban_time default: 60 # seconds ``` How long to ban a server if it fails a health check (seconds). ### log_client_connections ``` path: general.log_client_connections default: false ``` If we should log client connections ### log_client_disconnections ``` path: general.log_client_disconnections default: false ``` If we should log client disconnections ### autoreload ``` path: general.autoreload default: 15000 # milliseconds ``` When set, PgCat automatically reloads its configurations at the specified interval (in milliseconds) if it detects changes in the configuration file. The default interval is 15000 milliseconds or 15 seconds. ### worker_threads ``` path: general.worker_threads default: 5 ``` Number of worker threads the Runtime will use (4 by default). ### tcp_keepalives_idle ``` path: general.tcp_keepalives_idle default: 5 ``` Number of seconds of connection idleness to wait before sending a keepalive packet to the server. ### tcp_keepalives_count ``` path: general.tcp_keepalives_count default: 5 ``` Number of unacknowledged keepalive packets allowed before giving up and closing the connection. ### tcp_keepalives_interval ``` path: general.tcp_keepalives_interval default: 5 ``` ### tcp_user_timeout ``` path: general.tcp_user_timeout default: 10000 ``` A linux-only parameters that defines the amount of time in milliseconds that transmitted data may remain unacknowledged or buffered data may remain untransmitted (due to zero window size) before TCP will forcibly disconnect ### tls_certificate ``` path: general.tls_certificate default: example: "server.cert" ``` Path to TLS Certificate file to use for TLS connections ### tls_private_key ``` path: general.tls_private_key default: example: "server.key" ``` Path to TLS private key file to use for TLS connections ### admin_username ``` path: general.admin_username default: "admin_user" ``` User name to access the virtual administrative database (pgbouncer or pgcat) Connecting to that database allows running commands like `SHOW POOLS`, `SHOW DATABASES`, etc.. ### admin_password ``` path: general.admin_password default: "admin_pass" ``` Password to access the virtual administrative database ### auth_query ``` path: general.auth_query default: example: "SELECT $1" ``` Query to be sent to servers to obtain the hash used for md5 authentication. The connection will be established using the database configured in the pool. This parameter is inherited by every pool and can be redefined in pool configuration. ### auth_query_user ``` path: general.auth_query_user default: example: "sharding_user" ``` User to be used for connecting to servers to obtain the hash used for md5 authentication by sending the query specified in `auth_query_user`. The connection will be established using the database configured in the pool. This parameter is inherited by every pool and can be redefined in pool configuration. ### auth_query_password ``` path: general.auth_query_password default: example: "sharding_user" ``` Password to be used for connecting to servers to obtain the hash used for md5 authentication by sending the query specified in `auth_query_user`. The connection will be established using the database configured in the pool. This parameter is inherited by every pool and can be redefined in pool configuration. ### dns_cache_enabled ``` path: general.dns_cache_enabled default: false ``` When enabled, ip resolutions for server connections specified using hostnames will be cached and checked for changes every `dns_max_ttl` seconds. If a change in the host resolution is found old ip connections are closed (gracefully) and new connections will start using new ip. ### dns_max_ttl ``` path: general.dns_max_ttl default: 30 ``` Specifies how often (in seconds) cached ip addresses for servers are rechecked (see `dns_cache_enabled`). ## `pools.` Section ### pool_mode ``` path: pools..pool_mode default: "transaction" ``` Pool mode (see PgBouncer docs for more). `session` one server connection per connected client `transaction` one server connection per client transaction ### load_balancing_mode ``` path: pools..load_balancing_mode default: "random" ``` Load balancing mode `random` selects the server at random `loc` selects the server with the least outstanding busy connections ### checkout_failure_limit ``` path: pools..checkout_failure_limit default: 0 (disabled) ``` `Maximum number of checkout failures a client is allowed before it gets disconnected. This is needed to prevent persistent client/server imbalance in high availability setups where multiple PgCat instances are placed behind a single load balancer. If for any reason a client lands on a PgCat instance that has a large number of connected clients, it might get stuck in perpetual checkout failure loop especially in session mode ` ### default_role ``` path: pools..default_role default: "any" ``` If the client doesn't specify, PgCat routes traffic to this role by default. `any` round-robin between primary and replicas, `replica` round-robin between replicas only without touching the primary, `primary` all queries go to the primary unless otherwise specified. ### db_activity_based_routing ``` path: pools..db_activity_based_routing default: false ``` If enabled, PgCat will route queries to the primary if the queried table was recently written to. Only relevant when `query_parser_enabled` *and* `query_parser_read_write_splitting` is enabled. ##### Considerations: - *This feature is experimental and may not work as expected.* - This feature only works when the same PgCat instance is used for both reads and writes to the database. - This feature is not relevant when the primary is not part of the pool of databases used for load balancing of read queries. - If more than one PgCat instance is used for HA purposes, this feature will not work as expected. A way to still make it work is by using sticky sessions. ### db_activity_based_ms_init_delay ``` path: pools..db_activity_based_ms_init_delay default: 100 ``` The delay in milliseconds before the first activity-based routing check is performed. ### db_activity_ttl ``` path: pools..db_activity_ttl default: 900 ``` The time in seconds after which a DB is considered inactive when no queries/updates are performed to it. ### table_mutation_cache_ms_ttl ``` path: pools..table_mutation_cache_ms_ttl default: 50 ``` The time in milliseconds after a write to a table that all queries to that table will be routed to the primary. ### prepared_statements_cache_size ``` path: general.prepared_statements_cache_size default: 0 ``` Size of the prepared statements cache. 0 means disabled. TODO: update documentation ### query_parser_enabled ``` path: pools..query_parser_enabled default: true ``` If Query Parser is enabled, we'll attempt to parse every incoming query to determine if it's a read or a write. If it's a read query, we'll direct it to a replica. Otherwise, if it's a write, we'll direct it to the primary. ### primary_reads_enabled ``` path: pools..primary_reads_enabled default: true ``` If the query parser is enabled and this setting is enabled, the primary will be part of the pool of databases used for load balancing of read queries. Otherwise, the primary will only be used for write queries. The primary can always be explicitly selected with our custom protocol. ### sharding_key_regex ``` path: pools..sharding_key_regex default: example: '/\* sharding_key: (\d+) \*/' ``` Allow sharding commands to be passed as statement comments instead of separate commands. If these are unset this functionality is disabled. ### sharding_function ``` path: pools..sharding_function default: "pg_bigint_hash" ``` So what if you wanted to implement a different hashing function, or you've already built one and you want this pooler to use it? Current options: `pg_bigint_hash`: PARTITION BY HASH (Postgres hashing function) `sha1`: A hashing function based on SHA1 ### auth_query ``` path: pools..auth_query default: example: "SELECT $1" ``` Query to be sent to servers to obtain the hash used for md5 authentication. The connection will be established using the database configured in the pool. This parameter is inherited by every pool and can be redefined in pool configuration. ### auth_query_user ``` path: pools..auth_query_user default: example: "sharding_user" ``` User to be used for connecting to servers to obtain the hash used for md5 authentication by sending the query specified in `auth_query_user`. The connection will be established using the database configured in the pool. This parameter is inherited by every pool and can be redefined in pool configuration. ### auth_query_password ``` path: pools..auth_query_password default: example: "sharding_user" ``` Password to be used for connecting to servers to obtain the hash used for md5 authentication by sending the query specified in `auth_query_user`. The connection will be established using the database configured in the pool. This parameter is inherited by every pool and can be redefined in pool configuration. ### automatic_sharding_key ``` path: pools..automatic_sharding_key default: example: "data.id" ``` Automatically parse this from queries and route queries to the right shard! ### idle_timeout ``` path: pools..idle_timeout default: 40000 ``` Idle timeout can be overwritten in the pool ### connect_timeout ``` path: pools..connect_timeout default: 3000 ``` Connect timeout can be overwritten in the pool ## `pools..users.` Section ### username ``` path: pools..users..username default: "sharding_user" ``` PostgreSQL username used to authenticate the user and connect to the server if `server_username` is not set. ### password ``` path: pools..users..password default: "sharding_user" ``` PostgreSQL password used to authenticate the user and connect to the server if `server_password` is not set. ### server_username ``` path: pools..users..server_username default: example: "another_user" ``` PostgreSQL username used to connect to the server. ### server_password ``` path: pools..users..server_password default: example: "another_password" ``` PostgreSQL password used to connect to the server. ### pool_size ``` path: pools..users..pool_size default: 9 ``` Maximum number of server connections that can be established for this user. The maximum number of connection from a single Pgcat process to any database in the cluster is the sum of pool_size across all users. ### min_pool_size ``` path: pools..users..min_pool_size default: 0 ``` Minimum number of idle server connections to retain for this pool. ### statement_timeout ``` path: pools..users..statement_timeout default: 0 ``` Maximum query duration. Dangerous, but protects against DBs that died in a non-obvious way. 0 means it is disabled. ### connect_timeout ``` path: pools..users..connect_timeout default: # milliseconds ``` How long the client waits to obtain a server connection before aborting (ms). This is similar to PgBouncer's `query_wait_timeout`. If unset, uses the `connect_timeout` defined globally. ## `pools..shards.` Section ### servers ``` path: pools..shards..servers default: [["127.0.0.1", 5432, "primary"], ["localhost", 5432, "replica"]] ``` Array of servers in the shard, each server entry is an array of `[host, port, role]` ### mirrors ``` path: pools..shards..mirrors default: example: [["1.2.3.4", 5432, 0], ["1.2.3.4", 5432, 1]] ``` Array of mirrors for the shard, each mirror entry is an array of `[host, port, index of server in servers array]` Traffic hitting the server identified by the index will be sent to the mirror. ### database ``` path: pools..shards..database default: "shard0" ``` Database name (e.g. "postgres")