8.1. Preparing for switchover

As mentioned in the previous section, success of the switchover operation depends on repmgr being able to shut down the current primary server quickly and cleanly.

Ensure that a passwordless SSH connection is possible from the promotion candidate (standby) to the demotion candidate (current primary). If --siblings-follow will be used, ensure that passwordless SSH connections are possible from the promotion candidate to all standbys attached to the demotion candidate.

Note: repmgr expects to find the repmgr binary in the same path on the remote server as on the local server.

Double-check which commands will be used to stop/start/restart the current primary; on the current primary execute:

     repmgr -f /etc/repmgr.conf node service --list --action=stop
     repmgr -f /etc/repmgr.conf node service --list --action=start
     repmgr -f /etc/repmgr.conf node service --list --action=restart

These commands can be defined in repmgr.conf with service_start_command, service_stop_command and service_restart_command.

Important: If repmgr is installed from a package. you should set these commands to use the appropriate service commands defined by the package/operating system as these will ensure PostgreSQL is stopped/started properly taking into account configuration and log file locations etc.

If the service_*_command options aren't defined, repmgr will fall back to using pg_ctl to stop/start/restart PostgreSQL, which may not work properly, particularly when executed on a remote server.

For more details, see service command settings.

Note: On systemd systems we strongly recommend using the appropriate systemctl commands (typically run via sudo) to ensure systemd is informed about the status of the PostgreSQL service.

If using sudo for the systemctl calls, make sure the sudo specification doesn't require a real tty for the user. If not set this way, repmgr will fail to stop the primary.

Check that access from applications is minimalized or preferably blocked completely, so applications are not unexpectedly interrupted.

Check there is no significant replication lag on standbys attached to the current primary.

If WAL file archiving is set up, check that there is no backlog of files waiting to be archived, as PostgreSQL will not finally shut down until all of these have been archived. If there is a backlog exceeding archive_ready_warning WAL files, repmgr will emit a warning before attempting to perform a switchover; you can also check manually with repmgr node check --archive-ready.

Note: Ensure that repmgrd is *not* running anywhere to prevent it unintentionally promoting a node. This restriction will be removed in a future repmgr version.

Finally, consider executing repmgr standby switchover with the --dry-run option; this will perform any necessary checks and inform you about success/failure, and stop before the first actual command is run (which would be the shutdown of the current primary). Example output:

      $ repmgr standby switchover -f /etc/repmgr.conf --siblings-follow --dry-run
      NOTICE: checking switchover on node "node2" (ID: 2) in --dry-run mode
      INFO: SSH connection to host "node1" succeeded
      INFO: archive mode is "off"
      INFO: replication lag on this standby is 0 seconds
      INFO: all sibling nodes are reachable via SSH
      NOTICE: local node "node2" (ID: 2) will be promoted to primary; current primary "node1" (ID: 1) will be demoted to standby
      INFO: following shutdown command would be run on node "node1":
        "pg_ctl -l /var/log/postgresql/startup.log -D '/var/lib/postgresql/data' -m fast -W stop"
    

Important: Be aware that --dry-run checks the prerequisites for performing the switchover and some basic sanity checks on the state of the database which might effect the switchover operation (e.g. replication lag); it cannot however guarantee the switchover operation will succeed. In particular, if the current primary does not shut down cleanly, repmgr will not be able to reliably execute the switchover (as there would be a danger of divergence between the former and new primary nodes).

Note: See repmgr standby switchover for a full list of available command line options and repmgr.conf settings relevant to performing a switchover.

8.1.1. Switchover and pg_rewind

If the demotion candidate does not shut down smoothly or cleanly, there's a risk it will have a slightly divergent timeline and will not be able to attach to the new primary. To fix this situation without needing to reclone the old primary, it's possible to use the pg_rewind utility, which will usually be able to resync the two servers.

To have repmgr execute pg_rewind if it detects this situation after promoting the new primary, add the --force-rewind option.

Note: If repmgr detects a situation where it needs to execute pg_rewind, it will execute a CHECKPOINT on the new primary before executing pg_rewind.

For more details on pg_rewind, see: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/app-pgrewind.html.

pg_rewind has been part of the core PostgreSQL distribution since version 9.5. Users of versions 9.3 and 9.4 will need to manually install it; the source code is available here: https://github.com/vmware/pg_rewind. If the pg_rewind binary is not installed in the PostgreSQL bin directory, provide its full path on the demotion candidate with --force-rewind.

Note that building the 9.3/9.4 version of pg_rewind requires the PostgreSQL source code. Also, PostgreSQL 9.3 does not provide wal_log_hints, meaning data checksums must have been enabled when the database was initialized.