On Fri, Jul 3, 2015 at 3:01 PM, Martijn van Oosterhout
<klep...@svana.org> wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 03, 2015 at 02:34:44PM +0900, Fujii Masao wrote:
>> > Hmm, for me it is 100% reproducable. Are you familiar with Docker? I
>> > can probably construct a Dockerfile that reproduces it pretty reliably.
>>
>> I could reproduce the problem in the master branch by doing
>> the following steps.
>
> Thank you, I wasn't sure if you could kill the server fast enough
> without containers, but it looks like immediate mode is enough.
>
>> 1. start the PostgreSQL server with wal_level = minimal
>> 2. execute the following SQL statements
>>      begin;
>>      create table test(id serial primary key);
>>      truncate table test;
>>      commit;
>> 3. shutdown the server with immediate mode
>> 4. restart the server (crash recovery occurs)
>> 5. execute the following SQL statement
>>     select * from test;
>>
>> The optimization of TRUNCATE opereation that we can use when
>> CREATE TABLE and TRUNCATE are executed in the same transaction block
>> seems to cause the problem. In this case, only index file truncation is
>> logged, and index creation in btbuild() is not logged because wal_level
>> is minimal. Then at the subsequent crash recovery, index file is truncated
>> to 0 byte... Very simple fix is to log an index creation in that case,
>> but not sure if that's ok to do..

In 9.2 or before, this problem doesn't occur because no such error is thrown
even if an index file size is zero. But in 9.3 or later, since the planner
tries to read a meta page of an index to get the height of the btree tree,
an empty index file causes such error. The planner was changed that way by
commit 31f38f28, and the problem seems to be an oversight of that commit.

I'm not familiar with that change of the planner, but ISTM that we can
simply change _bt_getrootheight() so that 0 is returned if an index file is
empty, i.e., meta page cannot be read, in order to work around the problem.
Thought?

Regards,

-- 
Fujii Masao


-- 
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers

Reply via email to