gpstop

Stops or restarts a Greenplum Database system.

Synopsis

  1. gpstop [-d <master_data_directory>] [-B parallel_processes>]
  2. [-M smart | fast | immediate] [-t <timeout_seconds>] [-r] [-y] [-a]
  3. [-l <logfile_directory>] [-v | -q]
  4. gpstop -m [-d <master_data_directory>] [-y] [-l <logfile_directory>] [-v | -q]
  5. gpstop -u [-d <master_data_directory>] [-l <logfile_directory>] [-v | -q]
  6. gpstop --host <host_namea> [-d <master_data_directory>] [-l <logfile_directory>]
  7. [-t <timeout_seconds>] [-a] [-v | -q]
  8. gpstop --version
  9. gpstop -? | -h | --help

Description

The gpstop utility is used to stop the database servers that comprise a Greenplum Database system. When you stop a Greenplum Database system, you are actually stopping several postgres database server processes at once (the master and all of the segment instances). The gpstop utility handles the shutdown of the individual instances. Each instance is shutdown in parallel.

The default shutdown mode (-M smart) waits for current client connections to finish before completing the shutdown. If any connections remain open after the timeout period, or if you interrupt with CTRL-C, gpstop lists the open connections and prompts whether to continue waiting for connections to finish, or to perform a fast or immediate shutdown. The default timeout period is 120 seconds and can be changed with the -t timeout\_seconds option.

Specify the -M fast shutdown mode to roll back all in-progress transactions and terminate any connections before shutting down.

With the -u option, the utility uploads changes made to the master pg_hba.conf file or to runtime configuration parameters in the master postgresql.conf file without interruption of service. Note that any active sessions will not pick up the changes until they reconnect to the database.

Options

-a

Do not prompt the user for confirmation.

-B parallel_processes

The number of segments to stop in parallel. If not specified, the utility will start up to 64 parallel processes depending on how many segment instances it needs to stop.

-d master_data_directory

Optional. The master host data directory. If not specified, the value set for $MASTER_DATA_DIRECTORY will be used.

–host host_name

The utility shuts down the Greenplum Database segment instances on the specified host to allow maintenance on the host. Each primary segment instance on the host is shut down and the associated mirror segment instance is promoted to a primary segment if the mirror segment is on another host. Mirror segment instances on the host are shut down.

The segment instances are not shut down and the utility returns an error in these cases:

  • Segment mirroring is not enabled for the system.
  • The master or standby master is on the host.
  • Both a primary segment instance and its mirror are on the host.

This option cannot be specified with the -m, -r, -u, or -y options.

Note

The gprecoverseg utility restores segment instances. Run gprecoverseg commands to start the segments as mirrors and then to return the segments to their preferred role (primary segments).

-l logfile_directory

The directory to write the log file. Defaults to ~/gpAdminLogs.

-m

Optional. Shuts down a Greenplum master instance that was started in maintenance mode.

-M fast

Fast shut down. Any transactions in progress are interrupted and rolled back.

-M immediate

Immediate shut down. Any transactions in progress are cancelled.

This mode kills all postgres processes without allowing the database server to complete transaction processing or clean up any temporary or in-process work files.

-M smart

Smart shut down. This is the default shutdown mode. gpstop waits for active user connections to disconnect and then proceeds with the shutdown. If any user connections remain open after the timeout period (or if you interrupt by pressing CTRL-C) gpstop lists the open user connections and prompts whether to continue waiting for connections to finish, or to perform a fast or immediate shutdown.

-q

Run in quiet mode. Command output is not displayed on the screen, but is still written to the log file.

-r

Restart after shutdown is complete.

-t timeout_seconds

Specifies a timeout threshold (in seconds) to wait for a segment instance to shutdown. If a segment instance does not shutdown in the specified number of seconds, gpstop displays a message indicating that one or more segments are still in the process of shutting down and that you cannot restart Greenplum Database until the segment instance(s) are stopped. This option is useful in situations where gpstop is run and there are very large transactions that need to rollback. These large transactions can take over a minute to rollback and surpass the default timeout period of 120 seconds.

-u

This option reloads the pg_hba.conf files of the master and segments and the runtime parameters of the postgresql.conf files but does not shutdown the Greenplum Database array. Use this option to make new configuration settings active after editing postgresql.conf or pg_hba.conf. Note that this only applies to configuration parameters that are designated as runtime parameters.

-v

Displays detailed status, progress and error messages output by the utility.

-y

Do not stop the standby master process. The default is to stop the standby master.

-? | -h | –help

Displays the online help.

–version

Displays the version of this utility.

Examples

Stop a Greenplum Database system in smart mode:

  1. gpstop

Stop a Greenplum Database system in fast mode:

  1. gpstop -M fast

Stop all segment instances and then restart the system:

  1. gpstop -r

Stop a master instance that was started in maintenance mode:

  1. gpstop -m

Reload the postgresql.conf and pg_hba.conf files after making configuration changes but do not shutdown the Greenplum Database array:

  1. gpstop -u

See Also

gpstart