Re: lots of updates on small table - Mailing list pgsql-performance
From | Alvaro Herrera |
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Subject | Re: lots of updates on small table |
Date | |
Msg-id | 20050715002824.GA23728@alvh.no-ip.org Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: lots of updates on small table (alison@mirrabooka.com (Alison Winters)) |
Responses |
Re: lots of updates on small table
|
List | pgsql-performance |
On Fri, Jul 15, 2005 at 09:42:12AM +1000, Alison Winters wrote: > > > Our application requires a number of processes to select and update rows > > > from a very small (<10 rows) Postgres table on a regular and frequent > > > basis. These processes often run for weeks at a time, but over the > > > space of a few days we find that updates start getting painfully slow. > > > We are running a full vacuum/analyze and reindex on the table every day, > > Full vacuum, eh? I wonder if what you really need is very frequent > > non-full vacuum. Say, once in 15 minutes (exact rate depending on dead > > tuple rate.) > > > Is there a difference between vacuum and vacuum full? Yes. Vacuum full is more aggresive in compacting the table. Though it really works the same in the presence of long-running transactions: tuples just can't be removed. > The most recent output was this: > > INFO: --Relation public.plc_fldio-- > INFO: Pages 1221: Changed 3, reaped 256, Empty 0, New 0; Tup 108137: Vac 4176, Keep/VTL 108133/108133, UnUsed 19, MinLen84, MaxLen 84; Re-using: Free/Avail. Space 445176/371836; EndEmpty/Avail. Pages 0/256. > CPU 0.04s/0.14u sec elapsed 0.18 sec. > INFO: Index plcpage_idx: Pages 315; Tuples 108137: Deleted 4176. > CPU 0.03s/0.04u sec elapsed 0.14 sec. > INFO: Rel plc_fldio: Pages: 1221 --> 1221; Tuple(s) moved: 0. > CPU 0.03s/0.04u sec elapsed 0.36 sec. > INFO: Analyzing public.plc_fldio Hmm, so it seems your hourly vacuum is enough. I think the bloat theory can be trashed. Unless I'm reading this output wrong; I don't remember the details of this vacuum output. > We'll up it to every 15 minutes, but i don't know if that'll help > because even with the current vacuuming the updates are still getting > slower and slower over the course of several days. What really puzzles > me is why restarting the processes fixes it. I wonder if the problem may be plan caching. I didn't pay full attention to the description of your problem, so I don't remember if it could be an issue, but it's something to consider. > Does PostgreSQL keep some kind of backlog of transactions all for one > database connection? No. There could be a problem if you had very long transactions, but apparently this isn't your problem. > Isn't it normal to have processes that keep a single database > connection open for days at a time? I guess it depends on exactly what you do with it. I know of at least one case where an app keeps a connection open for months, without a problem. (It's been running for four or five years, and monthly "uptime" for that particular daemon is not unheard of.) -- Alvaro Herrera (<alvherre[a]alvh.no-ip.org>) "Everybody understands Mickey Mouse. Few understand Hermann Hesse. Hardly anybody understands Einstein. And nobody understands Emperor Norton."
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