Christopher Browne <cbbro...@gmail.com> writes: > - Grab timestamp > - Grab exclusive lock > - Process [Some number of pages] > - Check time. > - If [# of ms] have passed then check to see if anyone else has a lock > O/S on the table. > - Commit & give up the lock for a bit if they do > - Go back and process more pages if they don't
Actually, we could simplify that even further. Keep the code exactly as-is, but every small-number-of-pages, check to see if someone is waiting on a conflicting lock, and if so, fall out of the page checking loop. Truncate away however many pages we know at that time are safe, and end the vacuum normally. We'd have to rejigger the stuff in the lock manager that tries to boot autovacuum off the lock forcibly, but with a bit of luck that would get less crocky not more so. This wouldn't really have any parameters that require tuning, I think, and the max delay till the lock is released is not too much more than the time needed for ftruncate(). The really good thing about it is that vacuum's work is never wasted. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-bugs mailing list (pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-bugs