These two platforms have a remarkably tight default limit on the
number of SysV semaphores in the system: SEMMNS is only 60
out-of-the-box. Unless manual action is taken to raise that,
we'll only be able to allocate 3 sets of 16 usable semaphores
each, leading to initdb setting max_connections to just 20.
That's problematic because the core regression tests expect
to be able to launch 20 concurrent sessions, leaving us with
no headroom. This seems to be the cause of intermittent
buildfarm failures on some machines.
While there's no getting around the fact that you'd better raise
SEMMNS for production use on these platforms, it does seem desirable
for "make check" to pass reliably without that. We can make that
happen, at least for awhile longer, with two small changes:
* Change sysv_sema.c's SEMAS_PER_SET to 19, so that we can eat up
all of the available semas not just most of them.
* Change initdb to make the smallest max_connections value it will
consider be 25 not 20.
As of HEAD this will leave us with four free semaphores (using the
default values for other relevant parameters such as max_wal_senders).
So we won't need to consider this again until we've invented five
more background processes. Maybe by then we can switch both these
platforms to some other semaphore API.
For the moment, do this only in master; there've not been field
complaints that might justify a back-patch.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/
db2773a2-aca0-43d0-99c1-
060efcd9954e@gmail.com
|
SEMMNI
Maximum number of semaphore identifiers (i.e., sets)
- at least ceil(num_os_semaphores / 16) plus room for other applications
+ at least ceil(num_os_semaphores / 19) plus room for other applications
|
SEMMNS
Maximum number of semaphores system-wide
- ceil(num_os_semaphores / 16) * 17 plus room for other applications
+ ceil(num_os_semaphores / 19) * 20 plus room for other applications
|
SEMMSL
Maximum number of semaphores per set
- at least 17
+ at least 20
|
(), allowed autovacuum worker process
(), allowed WAL sender process
(), allowed background
- process (), etc., in sets of 16.
+ process (), etc., in sets of 19.
The runtime-computed parameter
reports the number of semaphores required. This parameter can be viewed
before starting the server with a postgres command like:
- Each set of 16 semaphores will
- also contain a 17th semaphore which contains a magic
+ Each set of 19 semaphores will
+ also contain a 20th semaphore which contains a magic
number, to detect collision with semaphore sets used by
other applications. The maximum number of semaphores in the system
is set by SEMMNS, which consequently must be at least
as high as num_os_semaphores plus one extra for
- each set of 1
6 required semaphores (see the formula in
+ each set of 1
9 required semaphores (see the formula in
linkend="sysvipc-parameters"/>). The parameter SEMMNI
determines the limit on the number of semaphore sets that can
exist on the system at one time. Hence this parameter must be at
- least ceil(num_os_semaphores / 16).
+ least ceil(num_os_semaphores / 19).
Lowering the number
of allowed connections is a temporary workaround for failures,
which are usually confusingly worded No space
* we allocate. It must be *less than* your kernel's SEMMSL (max semaphores
* per set) parameter, which is often around 25. (Less than, because we
* allocate one extra sema in each set for identification purposes.)
+ *
+ * The present value of 19 is chosen with one eye on NetBSD/OpenBSD's default
+ * SEMMNS setting of 60. Remembering the extra sema per set, this lets us
+ * allocate three sets with 57 useful semaphores before exceeding that, which
+ * is enough to run our core regression tests. Users of those systems will
+ * still want to raise SEMMNS for any sort of production work, though.
*/
-#define SEMAS_PER_SET 16
+#define SEMAS_PER_SET 19
#define IPCProtection (0600) /* access/modify by user only */
#define MIN_BUFS_FOR_CONNS(nconns) ((nconns) * 10)
static const int trial_conns[] = {
- 100, 50, 40, 30, 20
+ 100, 50, 40, 30, 25
};
static const int trial_bufs[] = {
16384, 8192, 4096, 3584, 3072, 2560, 2048, 1536,