repmgr is developed and tested on Linux and OS X, but should work on any UNIX-like system supported by PostgreSQL itself. There is no support for Microsoft Windows.
repmgr 5.3.3 is compatible with all PostgreSQL versions from 9.4. See section repmgr compatibility matrix for an overview of version compatibility.
If upgrading from repmgr 3.x, please see the section Upgrading from repmgr 3.x.
All servers in the replication cluster must be running the same major version of PostgreSQL, and we recommend that they also run the same minor version.
repmgr must be installed on each server in the replication cluster. If installing repmgr from packages, the package version must match the PostgreSQL version. If installing from source, repmgr must be compiled against the same major version.
The same "major" repmgr version (e.g. 5.3.3.x
) must
be installed on all node in the replication cluster. We strongly recommend keeping all
nodes on the same (preferably latest) "minor" repmgr version to minimize the risk
of incompatibilities.
If different "major" repmgr versions (e.g. 4.1.x and 5.3.3.x) are installed on different nodes, in the best case repmgr (in particular repmgrd) will not run. In the worst case, you will end up with a broken cluster.
A dedicated system user for repmgr is not required; as many repmgr and
repmgrd actions require direct access to the PostgreSQL data directory,
these commands should be executed by the postgres
user.
See also Prerequisites for configuration for information on networking requirements.
We recommend using a session multiplexer utility such as screen
or
tmux
when performing long-running actions (such as cloning a database)
on a remote server - this will ensure the repmgr action won't be prematurely
terminated if your ssh
session to the server is interrupted or closed.
The following table provides an overview of which repmgr version supports which PostgreSQL version.
Table 2.1. repmgr compatibility matrix
repmgr version | Supported? | Latest release | Supported PostgreSQL versions | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
repmgr 5.3 | YES | 5.3.3 (2022-10-17) | 9.4, 9.5, 9.6, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 | PostgreSQL 15 supported from repmgr 5.3.3 |
repmgr 5.2 | NO | 5.2.1 (2020-12-07) | 9.4, 9.5, 9.6, 10, 11, 12, 13 | |
repmgr 5.1 | NO | 5.1.0 (2020-04-13) | 9.3, 9.4, 9.5, 9.6, 10, 11, 12 | |
repmgr 5.0 | NO | 5.0 (2019-10-15) | 9.3, 9.4, 9.5, 9.6, 10, 11, 12 | |
repmgr 4.x | NO | 4.4 (2019-06-27) | 9.3, 9.4, 9.5, 9.6, 10, 11 | |
repmgr 3.x | NO | 3.3.2 (2017-05-30) | 9.3, 9.4, 9.5, 9.6 | |
repmgr 2.x | NO | 2.0.3 (2015-04-16) | 9.0, 9.1, 9.2, 9.3, 9.4 |
The repmgr 2.x and 3.x series are no longer maintained or supported. We strongly recommend upgrading to the latest repmgr version.
Following the release of repmgr 5.0, there will be no further releases of the repmgr 4.x series. Note that repmgr 5.x is an incremental development of the 4.x series and repmgr 4.x users should upgrade to this as soon as possible.
Note that some repmgr functionality is not available in PostgreSQL 9.4:
In PostgreSQL 9.4, pg_rewind
is not part of the core
distribution. pg_rewind
will need to be compiled separately to be able
to use any repmgr functionality which takes advantage of it.
PostgreSQL 9.3 has reached the end of its community support period (final release was 9.3.25 in November 2018) and will no longer be updated with security or bugfixes.
Beginning with repmgr 5.2, repmgr no longer supports PostgreSQL 9.3.
PostgreSQL 9.4 has reached the end of its community support period (final release was 9.4.26 in February 2020) and will no longer be updated with security or bugfixes.
We recommend that users of these versions migrate to a supported PostgreSQL version as soon as possible.
For further details, see the PostgreSQL Versioning Policy.