This was preventing it getting cleanly converted to a
CalculateLogicalSizeError::Cancelled, resulting in "Logical size
calculation failed" errors in logs.
## Problem
See: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/5796
## Summary of changes
Completing the refactor is quite verbose and can be done in stages: each
interface that is currently called directly from a top-level mgr.rs
function can be moved into TenantManager once the relevant subsystems
have access to it.
Landing the initial change to create of TenantManager is useful because
it enables new code to use it without having to be altered later, and
sets us up to incrementally fix the existing code to use an explicit
Arc<TenantManager> instead of relying on the static TENANTS.
## Problem
Follows on from #5299
- We didn't have a generic way to protect a tenant undergoing changes:
`Tenant` had states, but for our arbitrary transitions between
secondary/attached, we need a general way to say "reserve this tenant
ID, and don't allow any other ops on it, but don't try and report it as
being in any particular state".
- The TenantsMap structure was behind an async RwLock, but it was never
correct to hold it across await points: that would block any other
changes for all tenants.
## Summary of changes
- Add the `TenantSlot::InProgress` value. This means:
- Incoming administrative operations on the tenant should retry later
- Anything trying to read the live state of the tenant (e.g. a page
service reader) should retry later or block.
- Store TenantsMap in `std::sync::RwLock`
- Provide an extended `get_active_tenant_with_timeout` for page_service
to use, which will wait on InProgress slots as well as non-active
tenants.
Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/5378
---------
Co-authored-by: Christian Schwarz <christian@neon.tech>
## Problem
When shutting down a Tenant, it isn't just important to cause any
background tasks to stop. It's also important to wait until they have
stopped before declaring shutdown complete, in cases where we may re-use
the tenant's local storage for something else, such as running in
secondary mode, or creating a new tenant with the same ID.
## Summary of changes
A `Gate` class is added, inspired by
[seastar::gate](https://docs.seastar.io/master/classseastar_1_1gate.html).
For types that have an important lifetime that corresponds to some
physical resource, use of a Gate as well as a CancellationToken provides
a robust pattern for async requests & shutdown:
- Requests must always acquire the gate as long as they are using the
object
- Shutdown must set the cancellation token, and then `close()` the gate
to wait for requests in progress before returning.
This is not for memory safety: it's for expressing the difference
between "Arc<Tenant> exists", and "This tenant's files on disk are
eligible to be read/written".
- Both Tenant and Timeline get a Gate & CancellationToken.
- The Timeline gate is held during eviction of layers, and during
page_service requests.
- Existing cancellation support in page_service is refined to use the
timeline-scope cancellation token instead of a process-scope
cancellation token. This replaces the use of `task_mgr::associate_with`:
tasks no longer change their tenant/timelineidentity after being
spawned.
The Tenant's Gate is not yet used, but will be important for
Tenant-scoped operations in secondary mode, where we must ensure that
our secondary-mode downloads for a tenant are gated wrt the activity of
an attached Tenant.
This is part of a broader move away from using the global-state driven
`task_mgr` shutdown tokens:
- less global state where we rely on implicit knowledge of what task a
given function is running in, and more explicit references to the
cancellation token that a particular function/type will respect, making
shutdown easier to reason about.
- eventually avoid the big global TASKS mutex.
---------
Co-authored-by: Joonas Koivunen <joonas@neon.tech>
Improve the serde impl for several types (`Lsn`, `TenantId`,
`TimelineId`) by making them sensitive to
`Serializer::is_human_readadable` (true for json, false for bincode).
Fixes#3511 by:
- Implement the custom serde for `Lsn`
- Implement the custom serde for `Id`
- Add the helper module `serde_as_u64` in `libs/utils/src/lsn.rs`
- Remove the unnecessary attr `#[serde_as(as = "DisplayFromStr")]` in
all possible structs
Additionally some safekeeper types gained serde tests.
---------
Co-authored-by: Joonas Koivunen <joonas@neon.tech>
## Problem
The scrubber didn't know how to find the latest index_part when
generations were in use.
## Summary of changes
- Teach the scrubber to do the same dance that pageserver does when
finding the latest index_part.json
- Teach the scrubber how to understand layer files with generation
suffixes.
- General improvement to testability: scan_metadata has a machine
readable output that the testing `S3Scrubber` wrapper can read.
- Existing test coverage of scrubber was false-passing because it just
didn't see any data due to prefixing of data in the bucket. Fix that.
This is incremental improvement: the more confidence we can have in the
scrubber, the more we can use it in integration tests to validate the
state of remote storage.
---------
Co-authored-by: Arpad Müller <arpad-m@users.noreply.github.com>
Some of the log messages were lost with the #4938. This PR adds some of
them back, most notably:
- starting to on-demand download
- successful completion of on-demand download
- ability to see when there were many waiters for the layer download
- "unexpectedly on-demand downloading ..." is now `info!`
Additionally some rare events are logged as error, which should never
happen.
when introducing `get_and_upgrade` I forgot that an `evict_and_wait`
would had already incremented the counter for started evictions, but an
upgrade would just "silently" cancel the eviction as no drop would ever
run. these metrics are likely sources for alerts with the next release,
so it's important to keep them correct.
In an earlier PR
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/5743#discussion_r1378625244 I
added a FIXME and there's a simple solution suggested by @jcsp, so
implement it. Wondering why I did not implement this originally, there
is no concept of a permanent failure, so this failure will happen quite
often. I don't think the frequency is a problem however.
Sadly for std::fs::FileType there is only decimal and hex formatting, no
octal.
Following from discussion on
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/5436 where hacking an implicit
die-on-fatal-io behavior into an Error type was a source of disagreement
-- in this PR, dying on fatal I/O errors is explicit, with `fatal_err`
and `maybe_fatal_err` helpers in the `MaybeFatalIo` trait, which is
implemented for std::io::Result.
To enable this approach with `crashsafe_overwrite`, the return type of
that function is changed to std::io::Result -- the previous error enum
for this function was not used for any logic, and the utility of saying
exactly which step in the function failed is outweighed by the hygiene
of having an I/O funciton return an io::Result.
The initial use case for these helpers is the deletion queue.
With the layer implementation as was done in #4938, it is possible via
cancellation to cause two concurrent downloads on the same path, due to
how `RemoteTimelineClient::download_remote_layer` does tempfiles. Thread
the init semaphore through the spawned task of downloading to make this
impossible to happen.
Right before merging, I added a loop to `fn
LayerInner::get_or_maybe_download`, which was always supposed to be
there. However I had forgotten to restart initialization instead of
waiting for the eviction to happen to support original design goal of
"eviction should always lose to redownload (or init)". This was wrong.
After this fix, if `spawn_blocking` queue is blocked on something,
nothing bad will happen.
Part of #5737.
## Problem
Some requests with `Authorization` header did not properly set the
`Bearer ` prefix. Problem explained here
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/6390.
## Summary of changes
Added `Bearer ` prefix to missing requests.
## Problem
test_stderr hangs on MacOS.
See https://neondb.slack.com/archives/C036U0GRMRB/p1698438997903919
## Summary of changes
Always handle POLLHUP to prevent infinite loop.
## Checklist before requesting a review
- [ ] I have performed a self-review of my code.
- [ ] If it is a core feature, I have added thorough tests.
- [ ] Do we need to implement analytics? if so did you add the relevant
metrics to the dashboard?
- [ ] If this PR requires public announcement, mark it with
/release-notes label and add several sentences in this section.
## Checklist before merging
- [ ] Do not forget to reformat commit message to not include the above
checklist
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
The `LayerInner::version` never needed to be read in more than one
place. Clarified while fixing #5737 of which this is the first step.
This decrements possible wrong atomics usage in Layer, but does not
really fix anything.
## Problem
In #5658 we suppressed the first-iteration output from these logs, but
the volume of warnings is still problematic.
## Summary of changes
- Downgrade all slow task warnings to INFO. The information is still
there if we actively want to know about which tasks are running slowly,
without polluting the overall stream of warnings with situations that
are unsurprising to us.
- Revert the previous change so that we output on the first iteration as
we used to do. There is no reason to suppress these, now that the
severity is just info.
## Problem
Neon doesn't compile on nightly and had numerous clippy complaints.
## Summary of changes
1. Fixed troublesome dependency
2. Fixed or ignored the lints where appropriate
- include Layer generation in the default display, with
Generation::Broken as `-broken`
- omit layer from `layer_gc` span because the api it works with needs to
support N layers, so the api needs to log each layer
## Problem
If there were stray files in the timelines/ dir after tenant deletion,
pageserver could panic on out of range.
## Summary of changes
Use iterator `take()`, which doesn't care if the number of elements
available is less than requested.
The flush task logs a backtrace if it tries to upload and remote
timeline client is already in stopped state.
Therefore we cannot shut them down concurrently: flush task must be shut
down first.
This wasn't more obvious because:
- Timeline deletions IRL usually happen when not much is being written
- In tests, there is a global allow-list for this log
It's not obvious whether removing the global log allow list is safe,
this PR was prompted by how the log spam got in my way when testing
deletion changes.
## Problem
## Summary of changes
## Checklist before requesting a review
- [x] I have performed a self-review of my code.
- [ ] ~~If it is a core feature, I have added thorough tests.~~
- [ ] ~~Do we need to implement analytics? if so did you add the
relevant metrics to the dashboard?~~
- [ ] ~~If this PR requires public announcement, mark it with
/release-notes label and add several sentences in this section.~~
## Checklist before merging
- [ ] Do not forget to reformat commit message to not include the above
checklist
#5649 added the concept of dangling layers which #4938 uses but only
partially. I forgot to change `schedule_compaction_update` to not
schedule deletions to uphold the "have a layer, you can read it".
With the now remembered fix, I don't think these checks should ever fail
except for a mistake I already did. These changes might be useful for
protecting future changes, even though the Layer carrying the generation
AND the `schedule_(gc|compaction)_update` require strong arcs.
Rationale for keeping the `#[cfg(feature = "testing")]` is worsening any
leak situation which might come up.
- Add a new util `project_build_tag` macro, similar to
`project_git_version`
- Update the `set_build_info_metric` to accept and make use of
`build_tag` info
- Update all codes which use the `set_build_info_metric`
## Problem
The pageserver had two ways of loading a tenant:
- `spawn_load` would trust on-disk content to reflect all existing
timelines
- `spawn_attach` would list timelines in remote storage.
It was incorrect for `spawn_load` to trust local disk content, because
it doesn't know if the tenant might have been attached and written
somewhere else. To make this correct would requires some generation
number checks, but the payoff is to avoid one S3 op per tenant at
startup, so it's not worth the complexity -- it is much simpler to have
one way to load a tenant.
## Summary of changes
- `Tenant` objects are always created with `Tenant::spawn`: there is no
more distinction between "load" and "attach".
- The ability to run without remote storage (for `neon_local`) is
preserved by adding a branch inside `attach` that uses a fallback
`load_local` if no remote_storage is present.
- Fix attaching a tenant when it has a timeline with no IndexPart: this
can occur if a newly created timeline manages to upload a layer before
it has uploaded an index.
- The attach marker file that used to indicate whether a tenant should
be "loaded" or "attached" is no longer needed, and is removed.
- The GenericRemoteStorage interface gets a `list()` method that maps
more directly to what ListObjects does, returning both keys and common
prefixes. The existing `list_files` and `list_prefixes` methods are just
calls into `list()` now -- these can be removed later if we would like
to shrink the interface a bit.
- The remote deletion marker is moved into `timelines/` and detected as
part of listing timelines rather than as a separate GET request. If any
existing tenants have a marker in the old location (unlikely, only
happens if something crashes mid-delete), then they will rely on the
control plane retrying to complete their deletion.
- Revise S3 calls for timeline listing and tenant load to take a
cancellation token, and retry forever: it never makes sense to make a
Tenant broken because of a transient S3 issue.
## Breaking changes
- The remote deletion marker is moved from `deleted` to
`timelines/deleted` within the tenant prefix. Markers in the old
location will be ignored: it is the control plane's responsibility to
retry deletions until they succeed. Markers in the new location will be
tolerated by the previous release of pageserver via
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/5632
- The local `attaching` marker file is no longer written. Therefore, if
the pageserver is downgraded after running this code, the old pageserver
will not be able to distinguish between partially attached tenants and
fully attached tenants. This would only impact tenants that were partway
through attaching at the moment of downgrade. In the unlikely even t
that we do experience an incident that prompts us to roll back, then we
may check for attach operations in flight, and manually insert
`attaching` marker files as needed.
---------
Co-authored-by: Christian Schwarz <christian@neon.tech>
Previously, if walredo process crashed we would try to spawn a fresh one
every 2 seconds, which is expensive in itself, but also results in a
high I/O load from the part of the compaction prior to the failure,
which we re-run every 2 seconds.
Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/5671
## Problem
Tenant deletions would sometimes be accompanied by compaction stack
traces, because `shutdown()` puts the tenant into stopping state before
it joins background tasks.
## Summary of changes
Treat GC+Compaction as no-ops on a Stopping tenant.
Implement a new `struct Layer` abstraction which manages downloadness
internally, requiring no LayerMap locking or rewriting to download or
evict providing a property "you have a layer, you can read it". The new
`struct Layer` provides ability to keep the file resident via a RAII
structure for new layers which still need to be uploaded. Previous
solution solved this `RemoteTimelineClient::wait_completion` which lead
to bugs like #5639. Evicting or the final local deletion after garbage
collection is done using Arc'd value `Drop`.
With a single `struct Layer` the closed open ended `trait Layer`, `trait
PersistentLayer` and `struct RemoteLayer` are removed following noting
that compaction could be simplified by simply not using any of the
traits in between: #4839.
The new `struct Layer` is a preliminary to remove
`Timeline::layer_removal_cs` documented in #4745.
Preliminaries: #4936, #4937, #5013, #5014, #5022, #5033, #5044, #5058,
#5059, #5061, #5074, #5103, epic #5172, #5645, #5649. Related split off:
#5057, #5134.
## Problem
This line caused lots of errors to be emitted for healthy tenants.
## Summary of changes
Downgrade to debug, since it is an expected code path we'll take for
tenants at startup.
a single operation instead of N uploads and 1 deletion scheduling with
write(layer_map) lock releasing in the between. Compaction update will
make for a much better place to change how the operation will change in
future compared to more general file based operations.
builds upon #5645. solves the problem of difficult to see hopeful
correctness w.r.t. other `index_part.json` changing operations.
Co-authored-by: Shany Pozin <shany@neon.tech>
All loading (attached, or from disk) timelines overwrite the global
gauge for physical size. The `_set` method cannot be used safely, so
remove it and just "add" the physical size.
## Problem
Logical replication requires new AUX_FILES_KEY which is definitely
absent in existed database.
We do not have function to check if key exists in our KV storage.
So I have to handle the error in `list_aux_files` method.
But this key is also included in key space range and accessed y
`create_image_layer` method.
## Summary of changes
Check if AUX_FILES_KEY exists before including it in keyspace.
---------
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Shany Pozin <shany@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Arpad Müller <arpad-m@users.noreply.github.com>
This does two things: first a minor refactor to not use HTTP/1.x
style header names and also to not panic if some certain requests had no
"Accept" header. As a second thing, it addresses the third bullet point
from #3689:
> Change `get_lsn_by_timestamp` API method to return LSN even if we only
found commit before the specified timestamp.
This is done by adding a version parameter to the `get_lsn_by_timestamp`
API call and making its behaviour depend on the version number.
Part of #3414 (but doesn't address it in its entirety).
---------
Co-authored-by: Joonas Koivunen <joonas@neon.tech>
Two of the most common spurious log messages:
- broker connections terminate & we log at error severity. Unfortunately
tonic gives us an "Unknown" error so to suppress these we're doing
string matching. It's hacky but worthwhile for operations.
- the first iteration of tenant background tasks tends to over-run its
schedule and emit a warning. Ultimately we should fix these to run on
time, but for now we are not benefiting from polluting our logs with the
warnings.
Quest: #4745. Prerequisite for #4938. Original
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/4938#issuecomment-1777150665.
The new Layer implementation has so far been using
`RemoteTimelineClient::schedule_layer_file_deletion` from `Layer::drop`
but it was noticed that this could mean that the L0s compaction wanted
to remove could linger in the index part for longer time or be left
there for longer time. Solution is to split the
`RemoteTimelineClient::schedule_layer_file_deletion` into two parts:
- unlinking from index_part.json, to be called from end of compaction
and gc
- scheduling of actual deletions, to be called from `Layer::drop`
The added methods are added unused.
- finally add an `#[instrument]` to Timeline::create_image_layers,
making it easier to see that something is happening because we create
image layers
- format some macro context code
- add a warning not to create new validation functions a la parse do not
validate
Split off from #5198.
## Problem
Compaction's source of truth for what layers exist is the LayerManager.
`flush_frozen_layer` updates LayerManager before it has scheduled upload
of the frozen layer.
Compaction can then "see" the new layer, decide to delete it, schedule
uploads of replacement layers, all before `flush_frozen_layer` wakes up
again and schedules the upload. When the upload is scheduled, the local
layer file may be gone, in which case we end up with no such layer in
remote storage, but an entry still added to IndexPart pointing to the
missing layer.
## Summary of changes
Schedule layer uploads inside the `self.layers` lock, so that whenever a
frozen layer is present in LayerManager, it is also present in
RemoteTimelineClient's metadata.
Closes: #5635
## Problem
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/5580 will move the remote
deletion marker into the `timelines/` path.
This would cause old pageserver code to fail loading the tenant due to
an apparently invalid timeline ID. That would be a problem if we had to
roll back after deploying #5580
## Summary of changes
If a `deleted` file is in `timelines/` just ignore it.
## Problem
When the number of tenants is large, sequentially issuing the open/read
calls for their config files is a ~1000ms delay during startup. It's not
a lot, but it's simple to fix.
## Summary of changes
Put all the config loads into spawn_blocking() tasks and run them in a
JoinSet. We can simplify this a bit later when we have full async disk
I/O.
---------
Co-authored-by: Shany Pozin <shany@neon.tech>
Before this PR, the ticker was running at default miss behavior `Delay`.
For example, here is the startup output with 25k tenants:
```
2023-10-19T09:57:21.682466Z INFO synthetic_size_worker: starting calculate_synthetic_size_worker
2023-10-19T10:50:44.678202Z WARN synthetic_size_worker: task iteration took longer than the configured period elapsed=3202.995707156s period=10m task=ConsumptionMetricsSyntheticSizeWorker
2023-10-19T10:52:17.408056Z WARN synthetic_size_worker: task iteration took longer than the configured period elapsed=2695.72556035s period=10m task=ConsumptionMetricsSyntheticSizeWorker
```
The first message's `elapsed` value is correct. It matches the
delta between the log line timestamps.
The second one is logged ca 1.5min after, though, but reports a much
larger
`elapsed` than 1.5min.
This PR fixes the behavior by copying what `eviction_task.rs` does.
## Problem
We now persist tenant configuration every time we spawn a tenant. The
persist_tenant_config function is doing a series of non-async filesystem
I/O, because `crashsafe::` isn't async yet. This isn't a demonstrated
problem, but is a source of uncertainty when reasoning about what's
happening with our startup times.
## Summary of changes
- Wrap `crashsafe_overwrite` in `spawn_blocking`.
- Although I think this change makes sense, it does not have a
measurable impact on load time when testing with 10k tenants.
- This can be reverted when we have full async I/O
Stacked atop https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/5559
Before this PR, there was the following race condition:
```
T1: polls for writeable stdin
T1: writes to stdin
T1: enters poll for stdout/stderr
T2: enters poll for stdin write
WALREDO: writes to stderr
KERNEL: wakes up T1 and T2
Tx: reads stderr and prints it
Ty: reads stderr and gets EAGAIN
(valid values for (x, y) are (1, 2) or (2, 1))
```
The concrete symptom that we observed repeatedly was with PG16,
which started logging `registered custom resource manager`
to stderr always, during startup, thereby giving us repeated
opportunity to hit above race condition. PG14 and PG15 didn't log
anything to stderr, hence we could have only hit this race condition
if there was an actual error happening.
This PR fixes the race by moving the reading of stderr into a tokio
task. It exits when the stderr is closed by the child process, which
in turn happens when the child exits, either by itself or because
we killed it.
The downside is that the async scheduling can reorder the log messages,
which can be seen in the new `test_stderr`, which runs in a
single-threaded runtime. I included the output below.
Overall I think we should move the entire walredo to async, as Joonas
proposed many months ago. This PR's asyncification is just the first
step to resolve these
false page reconstruction errors.
After this is fixed, we should stop printing that annoying stderr
message
on walredo startup; it causes noise in the pageserver logs.
That work is tracked in #5399 .
```
2023-10-13T19:05:21.878858Z ERROR apply_wal_records{tenant_id=d546fb76ba529195392fb4d19e243991 pid=753986}: failed to write out the walredo errored input: No such file or directory (os error 2) target=walredo-1697223921878-1132-0.walredo length=1132
2023-10-13T19:05:21.878932Z DEBUG postgres applied 2 WAL records (1062 bytes) in 114666 us to reconstruct page image at LSN 0/0
2023-10-13T19:05:21.878942Z ERROR error applying 2 WAL records 0/16A9388..0/16D4080 (1062 bytes) to base image with LSN 0/0 to reconstruct page image at LSN 0/0 n_attempts=0: apply_wal_records
Caused by:
WAL redo process closed its stdout unexpectedly
2023-10-13T19:05:21.879027Z INFO kill_and_wait_impl{pid=753986}: wait successful exit_status=signal: 11 (SIGSEGV) (core dumped)
2023-10-13T19:05:21.879079Z DEBUG wal-redo-postgres-stderr{pid=753986 tenant_id=d546fb76ba529195392fb4d19e243991 pg_version=16}: wal-redo-postgres stderr_logger_task started
2023-10-13T19:05:21.879104Z ERROR wal-redo-postgres-stderr{pid=753986 tenant_id=d546fb76ba529195392fb4d19e243991 pg_version=16}: received output output="2023-10-13 19:05:21.769 GMT [753986] LOG: registered custom resource manager \"neon\" with ID 134\n"
2023-10-13T19:05:21.879116Z DEBUG wal-redo-postgres-stderr{pid=753986 tenant_id=d546fb76ba529195392fb4d19e243991 pg_version=16}: wal-redo-postgres stderr_logger_task finished
2023-10-13T19:05:22.004439Z ERROR apply_wal_records{tenant_id=d546fb76ba529195392fb4d19e243991 pid=754000}: failed to write out the walredo errored input: No such file or directory (os error 2) target=walredo-1697223922004-1132-0.walredo length=1132
2023-10-13T19:05:22.004493Z DEBUG postgres applied 2 WAL records (1062 bytes) in 125344 us to reconstruct page image at LSN 0/0
2023-10-13T19:05:22.004501Z ERROR error applying 2 WAL records 0/16A9388..0/16D4080 (1062 bytes) to base image with LSN 0/0 to reconstruct page image at LSN 0/0 n_attempts=1: apply_wal_records
Caused by:
WAL redo process closed its stdout unexpectedly
2023-10-13T19:05:22.004588Z INFO kill_and_wait_impl{pid=754000}: wait successful exit_status=signal: 11 (SIGSEGV) (core dumped)
2023-10-13T19:05:22.004624Z DEBUG wal-redo-postgres-stderr{pid=754000 tenant_id=d546fb76ba529195392fb4d19e243991 pg_version=16}: wal-redo-postgres stderr_logger_task started
2023-10-13T19:05:22.004653Z ERROR wal-redo-postgres-stderr{pid=754000 tenant_id=d546fb76ba529195392fb4d19e243991 pg_version=16}: received output output="2023-10-13 19:05:21.884 GMT [754000] LOG: registered custom resource manager \"neon\" with ID 134\n"
2023-10-13T19:05:22.004666Z DEBUG wal-redo-postgres-stderr{pid=754000 tenant_id=d546fb76ba529195392fb4d19e243991 pg_version=16}: wal-redo-postgres stderr_logger_task finished
```
## Problem
Loading tenants shouldn't hang. However, if it does, we shouldn't let
one hung tenant prevent the entire process from starting background
jobs.
## Summary of changes
Generalize the timeout mechanism that we already applied to loading
initial logical sizes: each phase in startup where we wait for a barrier
is subject to a timeout, and startup will proceed if it doesn't complete
within timeout.
Startup metrics will still reflect the time when a phase actually
completed, rather than when we skipped it.
The code isn't the most beautiful, but that kind of reflects the
awkwardness of await'ing on a future and then stashing it to await again
later if we time out. I could imagine making this cleaner in future by
waiting on a structure that doesn't self-destruct on wait() the way
Barrier does, then make InitializationOrder into a structure that
manages the series of waits etc.
## Problem
See #5468.
## Summary of changes
Add a new `get_timestamp_of_lsn` endpoint, returning the timestamp
associated with the given lsn.
Fixes#5468.
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Co-authored-by: Shany Pozin <shany@neon.tech>
## Problem
See https://github.com/neondatabase/company_projects/issues/111
## Summary of changes
Save logical replication files in WAL at compute and include them in
basebackup at pate server.
## Checklist before requesting a review
- [ ] I have performed a self-review of my code.
- [ ] If it is a core feature, I have added thorough tests.
- [ ] Do we need to implement analytics? if so did you add the relevant
metrics to the dashboard?
- [ ] If this PR requires public announcement, mark it with
/release-notes label and add several sentences in this section.
## Checklist before merging
- [ ] Do not forget to reformat commit message to not include the above
checklist
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Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Arseny Sher <sher-ars@yandex.ru>