Previously repmgr would first check that a replication can be made
from the demotion candidate to the promotion candidate, however it's
preferable to sanity-check the number of available walsenders first,
to provide a more useful error message.
Previously repmgr was relying on whatever command was configured to
start PostgreSQL to determine whether the node being rejoined had
started correctly. However it's preferable to actively poll the upstream
to confirm it has restarted and actually attached as a standby before
confirming success of the "node rejoin" action.
This can be overridden with the -W/--no-wait option.
(Note that for consistency with other PostgreSQL utilities, the
short form of the --wait option is now "-w"; this is currently
only used in "repmgr standby follow".)
Also update "repmgr node rejoin" documentation with a list of supported
options, and add some useful index entries for "pg_rewind".
Implements GitHub #415.
pg_rewind is not part of the core distribution for those, but we
provided support in repmgr 3.3 so should extend it to repmgr 4.
Note that there is no check in place whether the pg_rewind binary
exists, so it's up to the user to ensure it's present.
Addresses GitHub #413.
During a switchover operation, once the demoted primary has been restarted
as a standby, repmgr attempts to reconnect to verify its status and drop
any redundant replication slots. However it's possible the standby may still
be in the startup phase, so poll for "standby_reconnect_timeout" seconds
before giving up.
Addresses GitHub #408.
When executing a command on a remote server, repmgr expects the remote binary
to be in the same location as the local binary. It's reasonable to assume
repmgr will be deployed in a unified environment; if not, the onus is on the
user to ensure repmgr can find the remote binary, e.g. by creating appropriate
symlinks.
Addresses query in GitHub #406.