> On Fri, Nov 22, 2019 at 01:20:59PM +0000, Zwettler Markus (OIZ) wrote:
> > I came up with the following query which should return any apply lag in seconds.
> >
> > select coalesce(replay_delay, 0) replication_delay_in_sec from (
> > select datname,
> > (
> > select case
> > when received_lsn = latest_end_lsn then 0
> > else extract(epoch
> > from now() - latest_end_time)
> > end
> > from pg_stat_wal_receiver
> > ) replay_delay
> > from pg_database
> > where datname = current_database()
> > ) xview;
> >
> >
> > I would expect delays >0 in case SYNC or ASYNC replication is somehow
> > behind. We will do a warning at 120 secs and critical at 300 secs.
>
> pg_stat_wal_receiver is available only on the receiver, aka the standby so it would
> not really be helpful on a primary. On top of that streaming replication is system-
> wide, so there is no actual point to look at databases either.
>
> > Would this do the job or am I missing something here?
>
> Here is a suggestion for Nagios: hot_standby_delay, as told in
> https://github.com/bucardo/check_postgres/blob/master/check_postgres.pl
> --
> Michael
I don't want to use check_hot_standby_delay as I would have to configure every streaming replication configuration
separatelywith nagios.
I want a generic routine which I can load on any postgres server regardless of streaming replication or database role.
The query would return >0 if streaming replication falls behind and 0 in all other cases (replication or not).
Checking streaming replication per database doesn't make any sense to me.
Markus