Robert Haas <robertmh...@gmail.com> writes: > On Thu, Apr 16, 2020 at 2:17 PM Hamid Akhtar <hamid.akh...@gmail.com> wrote: >> So is the concern performance overhead rather than the need for such a >> feature?
> No, I don't think this would have any significant overhead. My concern > is that I think it's the wrong way to solve the problem. FWIW, I agree with Robert that this patch is a bad idea. His recommendation is to use an external monitoring tool, which is not a self-contained solution, but this isn't either: you'd need to add an external log-scraping tool to spot the warnings. Even if I liked the core idea, loading the functionality onto VACUUM seems like a fairly horrid design choice. It's quite unrelated to what that command does. In the autovac code path, it's going to lead to multiple autovac workers all complaining simultaneously about the same problem. But having manual vacuums complain about issues unrelated to the task at hand is also a seriously poor bit of UX design. Moreover, that won't do all that much to surface problems, since most(?) installations never run manual vacuums; or if they do, the "manual" runs are really done by a cron job or the like, which is not going to notice the warnings. So you still need a log-scraping tool. If we were going to go down the path of periodically logging warnings about old prepared transactions, some single-instance background task like the checkpointer would be a better place to do the work in. But I'm not really recommending that, because I agree with Robert that we just plain don't want this functionality. regards, tom lane