On Thu, Dec 29, 2011 at 2:10 PM, Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
> havasvolgyi.o...@gmail.com writes:
>> The following bug has been logged on the website:
>> Bug reference:      6365
>> Logged by:          Otto Havasvölgyi
>> Email address:      havasvolgyi.o...@gmail.com
>> PostgreSQL version: 9.1.2
>> Operating system:   Win XP SP2 x86; Linux Debian 2.6.32 kernel x64
>> Description:
>
>> The bug can be reproduced with pgbench:
>
> I see no memory leak with this example.
>
> I suspect you are being fooled by tools that report shared memory as
> being used by a process only after it first touches a given page of
> shared memory ("top" on Linux does that, for example).  This will cause
> the apparent memory consumption of any long-lived backend to increase
> until it has touched every available shared buffer.  But that's not a
> leak, just an artifact of the reporting tool.  You can confirm for
> yourself that that's what's happening by reducing shared_buffers to
> a few megabytes and observing that reported memory usage increases up
> to that much and then stops growing.
>
> On Linux, I find that watching the "VIRT" column of top output is a
> far more reliable guide to whether a memory leak is actually occuring.
> Can't offer any suggestions as to what to use on Windows.

This is by the way a FAQ:
http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/FAQ#Why_does_PostgreSQL_use_so_much_memory.3F

merlin

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