repmgr service status repmgrd displaying service status repmgr service status repmgr service status display information about the status of &repmgrd; on each node in the cluster Description This command provides an overview over all active nodes in the cluster and the state of each node's &repmgrd; instance. It can be used to check the result of and operations. Prerequisites PostgreSQL should be accessible on all nodes (using the conninfo string shown by repmgr cluster show) from the node where repmgr service status is executed. Execution repmgr service status can be executed on any active node in the replication cluster. A valid repmgr.conf file is required. If a node is not accessible, or PostgreSQL itself is not running on the node, &repmgr; will not be able to determine the status of that node's &repmgrd; instance, and "n/a" will be displayed in the node's repmgrd column. After restarting PostgreSQL on any node, the &repmgrd; instance will take a second or two before it is able to update its status. Until then, &repmgrd; will be shown as not running. Examples &repmgrd; running normally on all nodes: $ repmgr -f /etc/repmgr.conf service status ID | Name | Role | Status | Upstream | repmgrd | PID | Paused? | Upstream last seen ----+-------+---------+-----------+----------+---------+-------+---------+-------------------- 1 | node1 | primary | * running | | running | 96563 | no | n/a 2 | node2 | standby | running | node1 | running | 96572 | no | 1 second(s) ago 3 | node3 | standby | running | node1 | running | 96584 | no | 0 second(s) ago &repmgrd; paused on all nodes (using ): $ repmgr -f /etc/repmgr.conf service status ID | Name | Role | Status | Upstream | repmgrd | PID | Paused? | Upstream last seen ----+-------+---------+-----------+----------+---------+-------+---------+-------------------- 1 | node1 | primary | * running | | running | 96563 | yes | n/a 2 | node2 | standby | running | node1 | running | 96572 | yes | 1 second(s) ago 3 | node3 | standby | running | node1 | running | 96584 | yes | 0 second(s) ago &repmgrd; not running on one node: $ repmgr -f /etc/repmgr.conf service status ID | Name | Role | Status | Upstream | repmgrd | PID | Paused? | Upstream last seen ----+-------+---------+-----------+----------+-------------+-------+---------+-------------------- 1 | node1 | primary | * running | | running | 96563 | yes | n/a 2 | node2 | standby | running | node1 | not running | n/a | n/a | n/a 3 | node3 | standby | running | node1 | running | 96584 | yes | 0 second(s) ago Options repmgr service status accepts an optional parameter --csv, which outputs the replication cluster's status in a simple CSV format, suitable for parsing by scripts, e.g.: $ repmgr -f /etc/repmgr.conf service status --csv 1,node1,primary,1,1,5722,1,100,-1,default 2,node2,standby,1,0,-1,1,100,1,default 3,node3,standby,1,1,5779,1,100,1,default The columns have following meanings: node ID node name node type (primary or standby) PostgreSQL server running (1 = running, 0 = not running) &repmgrd; running (1 = running, 0 = not running, -1 = unknown) &repmgrd; PID (-1 if not running or status unknown) &repmgrd; paused (1 = paused, 0 = not paused, -1 = unknown) &repmgrd; node priority interval in seconds since the node's upstream was last seen (this will be -1 if the value could not be retrieved, or the node is primary) node location Display additional information (location, priority) about the &repmgr; configuration. Display the full text of any database connection error messages. See also , , , , ,