Erik Jones wrote: > Hi, this question is mostly born of curiosity: when monitoring our > database I often use the following queries to get a current query count > and listing of individual queries: > > select count(*) > from pg_stat_activity > where current_query not ilike '<idle>'; > > select procpid, (now() - query_start) as query_time, client_addr as > client_host, current_query > from pg_stat_activity > where current_query not ilike '<idle>' > --and procpid=4452 > --and currrent_query ilike ' ' > order by (now() - query_start) desc; > > Before migrating to 8.2, even during peak times, unless queries were > seriously stacking (not completing in a timely manner), we'd see at most > 50 - 100 queries active at any given time (we did have > stats_command_string = on). Since the migration, during peak times it's > not uncommon to see the query count vary radically between around 80 and > the upper 400s (we have max_connections set to 512). This variation is > per second and when the count is high, the vast majority listed are > sub-second. It would seem that this is due to some fine tuning > somewhere on th backside of 8.2 versus previous versions. Was there > previously a more limited precision to the query lengths that would be > picked up by the pg_stat_activity view?
8.2 gives a much more up-to-date list of active queries than previous versions. -- Bruce Momjian [EMAIL PROTECTED] EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com + If your life is a hard drive, Christ can be your backup. + ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faq