235 lines
		
	
	
		
			10 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
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			235 lines
		
	
	
		
			10 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
---
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stage: Data Stores
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group: Database
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Database Load Balancing **(FREE SELF)**
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> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/1283) in [GitLab Premium](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/) 9.0.
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> - [Moved](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/60894) from GitLab Premium to GitLab Free in 14.0.
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> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/334494) for Sidekiq in GitLab 14.1.
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With Database Load Balancing, read-only queries can be distributed across
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multiple PostgreSQL nodes to increase performance.
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This functionality is provided natively in GitLab Rails and Sidekiq where
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they can be configured to balance their database read queries in a round-robin approach,
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without any external dependencies:
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```plantuml
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@startuml
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card "**Internal Load Balancer**" as ilb #9370DB
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skinparam linetype ortho
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together {
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  collections "**GitLab Rails** x3" as gitlab #32CD32
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  collections "**Sidekiq** x4" as sidekiq #ff8dd1
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}
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collections "**Consul** x3" as consul #e76a9b
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card "Database" as database {
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  collections "**PGBouncer x3**\n//Consul//" as pgbouncer #4EA7FF
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  card "**PostgreSQL** //Primary//\n//Patroni//\n//PgBouncer//\n//Consul//" as postgres_primary #4EA7FF
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  collections "**PostgreSQL** //Secondary// **x2**\n//Patroni//\n//PgBouncer//\n//Consul//" as postgres_secondary #4EA7FF
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  pgbouncer -[#4EA7FF]-> postgres_primary
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  postgres_primary .[#4EA7FF]r-> postgres_secondary
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}
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gitlab -[#32CD32]-> ilb
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gitlab -[hidden]-> pgbouncer
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gitlab .[#32CD32,norank]-> postgres_primary
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gitlab .[#32CD32,norank]-> postgres_secondary
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sidekiq -[#ff8dd1]-> ilb
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sidekiq -[hidden]-> pgbouncer
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sidekiq .[#ff8dd1,norank]-> postgres_primary
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sidekiq .[#ff8dd1,norank]-> postgres_secondary
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ilb -[#9370DB]-> pgbouncer
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consul -[#e76a9b]r-> pgbouncer
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consul .[#e76a9b,norank]r-> postgres_primary
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consul .[#e76a9b,norank]r-> postgres_secondary
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@enduml
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```
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## Requirements to enable Database Load Balancing
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To enable Database Load Balancing, make sure that:
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- The HA PostgreSQL setup has one or more secondary nodes replicating the primary.
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- Each PostgreSQL node is connected with the same credentials and on the same port.
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For Omnibus GitLab, you also need PgBouncer configured on each PostgreSQL node to pool
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all load-balanced connections when [configuring a multi-node setup](replication_and_failover.md).
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## Configuring Database Load Balancing
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Database Load Balancing can be configured in one of two ways:
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- (Recommended) [Hosts](#hosts): a list of PostgreSQL hosts.
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- [Service Discovery](#service-discovery): a DNS record that returns a list of PostgreSQL hosts.
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### Hosts
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To configure a list of hosts, add the `gitlab_rails['db_load_balancing']` setting into the
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`gitlab.rb` file in the GitLab Rails / Sidekiq nodes for each environment you want to balance.
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For example, on an environment that has PostgreSQL running on the hosts `host1.example.com`,
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`host2.example.com` and `host3.example.com` and reachable on the same port configured with
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`gitlab_rails['db_port']`:
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1. On each GitLab Rails / Sidekiq node, edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb` and add the following line:
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  ```ruby
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  gitlab_rails['db_load_balancing'] = { 'hosts' => ['host1.example.com', 'host2.example.com', `host3.example.com`] }
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  ```
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1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure).
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### Service Discovery
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> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/5883) in GitLab 11.0.
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Service discovery allows GitLab to automatically retrieve a list of PostgreSQL
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hosts to use. It periodically
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checks a DNS `A` record, using the IPs returned by this record as the addresses
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for the secondaries. For service discovery to work, all you need is a DNS server
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and an `A` record containing the IP addresses of your secondaries.
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When using Omnibus GitLab the provided [Consul](../consul.md) service works as
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a DNS server and returns PostgreSQL addresses via the `postgresql-ha.service.consul`
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record. For example:
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1. On each GitLab Rails / Sidekiq node, edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb` and add the following:
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  ```ruby
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  gitlab_rails['db_load_balancing'] = { 'discover' => {
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      'nameserver' => 'localhost'
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      'record' => 'postgresql-ha.service.consul'
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      'record_type' => 'A'
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      'port' => '8600'
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      'interval' => '60'
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      'disconnect_timeout' => '120'
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    }
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  }
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  ```
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1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure) for the changes to take effect.
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| Option               | Description                                                                                       | Default   |
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|----------------------|---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|-----------|
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| `nameserver`         | The nameserver to use for looking up the DNS record.                                              | localhost |
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| `record`             | The record to look up. This option is required for service discovery to work.                     |           |
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| `record_type`        | Optional record type to look up, this can be either `A` or `SRV` (GitLab 12.3 and later)          | `A`       |
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| `port`               | The port of the nameserver.                                                                       | 8600      |
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| `interval`           | The minimum time in seconds between checking the DNS record.                                      | 60        |
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| `disconnect_timeout` | The time in seconds after which an old connection is closed, after the list of hosts was updated. | 120       |
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| `use_tcp`            | Lookup DNS resources using TCP instead of UDP                                                     | false     |
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If `record_type` is set to `SRV`, then GitLab continues to use round-robin algorithm
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and ignores the `weight` and `priority` in the record. Since `SRV` records usually
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return hostnames instead of IPs, GitLab needs to look for the IPs of returned hostnames
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in the additional section of the `SRV` response. If no IP is found for a hostname, GitLab
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needs to query the configured `nameserver` for `ANY` record for each such hostname looking for `A` or `AAAA`
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records, eventually dropping this hostname from rotation if it can't resolve its IP.
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The `interval` value specifies the _minimum_ time between checks. If the `A`
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record has a TTL greater than this value, then service discovery honors said
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TTL. For example, if the TTL of the `A` record is 90 seconds, then service
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discovery waits at least 90 seconds before checking the `A` record again.
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When the list of hosts is updated, it might take a while for the old connections
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to be terminated. The `disconnect_timeout` setting can be used to enforce an
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upper limit on the time it takes to terminate all old database connections.
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### Handling stale reads
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> [Moved](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/327902) from GitLab Premium to GitLab Free in 14.0.
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To prevent reading from an outdated secondary the load balancer checks if it
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is in sync with the primary. If the data is recent enough, the
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secondary is used, otherwise it is ignored. To reduce the overhead of
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these checks we only perform them at certain intervals.
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There are three configuration options that influence this behavior:
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| Option                       | Description                                                                                                    | Default    |
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|------------------------------|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|------------|
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| `max_replication_difference` | The amount of data (in bytes) a secondary is allowed to lag behind when it hasn't replicated data for a while. | 8 MB       |
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| `max_replication_lag_time`   | The maximum number of seconds a secondary is allowed to lag behind before we stop using it.                    | 60 seconds |
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| `replica_check_interval`     | The minimum number of seconds we have to wait before checking the status of a secondary.                       | 60 seconds |
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The defaults should be sufficient for most users.
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To configure these options with a hosts list, use the following example:
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```ruby
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gitlab_rails['db_load_balancing'] = {
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  'hosts' => ['host1.example.com', 'host2.example.com', `host3.example.com`]
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  'max_replication_difference' => 16777216 # 16 MB
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  'max_replication_lag_time' => 30
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  'replica_check_interval' => 30
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}
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```
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## Logging
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The load balancer logs various events in
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[`database_load_balancing.log`](../logs/index.md#database_load_balancinglog), such as
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- When a host is marked as offline
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- When a host comes back online
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- When all secondaries are offline
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- When a read is retried on a different host due to a query conflict
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The log is structured with each entry a JSON object containing at least:
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- An `event` field useful for filtering.
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- A human-readable `message` field.
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- Some event-specific metadata. For example, `db_host`
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- Contextual information that is always logged. For example, `severity` and `time`.
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For example:
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```json
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{"severity":"INFO","time":"2019-09-02T12:12:01.728Z","correlation_id":"abcdefg","event":"host_online","message":"Host came back online","db_host":"111.222.333.444","db_port":null,"tag":"rails.database_load_balancing","environment":"production","hostname":"web-example-1","fqdn":"gitlab.example.com","path":null,"params":null}
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```
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## Implementation Details
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### Balancing queries
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Read-only `SELECT` queries balance among all the given hosts.
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Everything else (including transactions) executes on the primary.
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Queries such as `SELECT ... FOR UPDATE` are also executed on the primary.
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### Prepared statements
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Prepared statements don't work well with load balancing and are disabled
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automatically when load balancing is enabled. This shouldn't impact
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response timings.
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### Primary sticking
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After a write has been performed, GitLab sticks to using the primary for a
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certain period of time, scoped to the user that performed the write. GitLab
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reverts back to using secondaries when they have either caught up, or after 30
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seconds.
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### Failover handling
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In the event of a failover or an unresponsive database, the load balancer
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tries to use the next available host. If no secondaries are available the
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operation is performed on the primary instead.
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If a connection error occurs while writing data, the
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operation retries up to 3 times using an exponential back-off.
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When using load balancing, you should be able to safely restart a database server
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without it immediately leading to errors being presented to the users.
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