Ahhhh... so if the script that has the connection open would only terminate the 
transaction, then vacuum wouldn't get behind?

I actually made a change in that script to rollback when the script doesn't 
need the changes in the transaction, hopefully allowing vacuum to do its thing.

Thanks!

-----Original Message-----
From: pgsql-general-ow...@postgresql.org 
[mailto:pgsql-general-ow...@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of John R Pierce
Sent: Wednesday, November 09, 2011 2:21 PM
To: pgsql-general@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [GENERAL] <IDLE> connections and cpu consumption

On 11/09/11 10:35 AM, Gauthier, Dave wrote:
>
> I'm using "selcet procpid,current_query from pg_stat_activity" to 
> monitor activity during times when "top" is showing many PG procs with 
> very high cpu usage numbers (all cores at or above 90%).  Some of 
> these are procs that map to PG connections with current_query = <IDLE>.
>
> What scenarios could explain a process identified as IDLE consuming 
> lots of CPU?
>
> More clues... In parallel with these was a user that was making a 
> series of insert/delete/update commands that fire off triggers that 
> generate more DML recursively.  Some of the idles are "<IDLE> in 
> transaction".
>

perhaps you just happened to sample pg_stat_activity in between queries? 
<IDLE> should be just that. <IDLE> in transaction is equally idle, but 
there's an open transaction.   if these processes STAY idle in 
transaction for too long they can cause vacuum to get behind, thats 
typically hours-to-days before this is a problem in most scenarios.


-- 
john r pierce                            N 37, W 122
santa cruz ca                         mid-left coast


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