As it's possible to specify the connection information for any available
node, but currently not possible to rejoin to a node other than the
primary, explicitly mention what the rejoin target will be.
In a corner-case situation where a standby is unable to attach to
the new primary due to a mismatch in the WAL stream, the connection
used to verify the recovery status of the new primary was not being
closed, leading to a risk of connection exhaustion on the new primary.
Addresses GitHub #682.
Previously, repmgr would forcibly change the permissions on a data
directory to 0700. However from PostgreSQL 11, 0750 is also valid,
so that value should not be changed.
When cloning a standby, it's possible to do a "raw" clone by providing
-D/--data-directory but no repmgr.conf file. However the code which
creates "standby.signal" was assuming the presence of a valid
repmgr.conf complete with "data_directory" configuration.
This is very much a niche-use case.
Here the compiler may complain that the source length is being used,
though in all cases the source length was previously used to
define the length of the destination buffer, so it's not actually
a problem.
If neither the local node nor the upstream are available, and
"standby_disconnect_on_failover" is set, attempting to fetch
the walreceiver PID will result in repmgrd terminating.
Add a check that the connection is valid before attempting to
fetch the walreceiver PID.
Addresses GitHub #675.
This overrides the equivalent setting in repmgr.conf, if present.
Note this option was available in repmgr versions prior to 4.0, but
was assumed to be redundant. However recently a use-case was made
for its reintroduction.
Fix the `repmgr witness --help` command where at the "Unregister" section the message shown was
```
"witness register" unregisters a witness node.
```
instead of
```
"witness unregister" unregisters a witness node.
```
GitHub #676.
Until now the extension version has always moved in lock-step
with the binary version, but that doesn't always need to be
the case, so make it possible to have an extension version
which does not match the binary version.
Would always return "false", but as the value wasn't used anywhere,
the issue was inconsequential.
However while we're at it, actually check the return value in the
two places it's called, to help diagnose any issues in the unlikely
event they occur.
Per issue reported via GitHub PR #671 from user duzhgg.
In PostgreSQL 12 and later we need to append replication configuration
to "postgresql.auto.conf" to guarantee it will be read last, and hence
override any preceding replication configuration which may be haunting
the configuration files.
We've been assuming that "postgresql.auto.conf" will always be present,
but at least one corner case has been observed where that was not the
case on the node being cloned from. Moreover it's perfectly acceptable
that this file does not exist (it will be recreated the next time
ALTER SYSTEM is executed), so we should be prepared to handle that case.
In passing, improve handling of more unlikely errors which might be
encountered when processing "postgresql.auto.conf".
Apparently "ALTER TABLE" (which we were using to convert the
"repl_events" table) does not mark the table as being part of the
extension. Instead, we need to create the new table and copy the
data, as is done with the other tables.