On Sat, May 18, 2024 at 05:29:12PM +1200, Thomas Munro wrote: > On Fri, May 17, 2024 at 4:46 PM Thomas Munro <thomas.mu...@gmail.com> wrote: > > The specific problem here is that LocalProcessControlFile() runs in > > every launched child for EXEC_BACKEND builds. Windows uses > > EXEC_BACKEND, and Windows' NTFS file system is one of the two file > > systems known to this list to have the concurrent read/write data > > mashing problem (the other being ext4).
> First idea idea I've come up with to avoid all of that: pass a copy of > the "proto-controlfile", to coin a term for the one read early in > postmaster startup by LocalProcessControlFile(). As far as I know, > the only reason we need it is to suck some settings out of it that > don't change while a cluster is running (mostly can't change after > initdb, and checksums can only be {en,dis}abled while down). Right? > Children can just "import" that sucker instead of calling > LocalProcessControlFile() to figure out the size of WAL segments yada > yada, I think? Later they will attach to the real one in shared > memory for all future purposes, once normal interlocking is allowed. I like that strategy, particularly because it recreates what !EXEC_BACKEND backends inherit from the postmaster. It might prevent future bugs that would have been specific to EXEC_BACKEND. > I dunno. Draft patch attached. Better plans welcome. This passes CI > on Linux systems afflicted by EXEC_BACKEND, and Windows. Thoughts? Looks reasonable. I didn't check over every detail, given the draft status.