Craig Ringer writes:
> If the bloat issue were with relations rather than indexes I'd suspect
> free space map issues as you're on 8.3.
> http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/interactive/runtime-config-resource.html
> My (poor) understanding is that index-only bloat probably won't be an
> FSM is
On 20/09/2010 7:59 PM, Daniele Varrazzo wrote:
Does anybody have some information about where the bloat is coming
from and what is the best way to get rid of it? Would a vacuum full
fix this kind of problem? Is there a way to fix it without taking the
system offline?
It's hard to know where th
Ogden writes:
> SELECT tr.id, tr.sid
> FROM
> test_registration tr,
> INNER JOIN test_registration_result r on (tr.id =
> r.test_registration_id)
> WHERE.
>
> tr.test_administration_id='32a22b12-aa21-11df-a606-96551e8f4e4c'::uuid
>
Greg Smith writes:
> and the query optimizer needs to be careful about what it does and
> doesn't pull from disk. If that's not the case, like here where there's
> 8GB of RAM and a 7GB database, dramatic reductions to both seq_page_cost
> and random_page_cost can make sense. Don't be afraid t
Joe Miller writes:
> I was looking at the autovacuum documentation:
> http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/interactive/routine-vacuuming.html#AUTOVACUUM
>For analyze, a similar condition is used: the threshold, defined as:
>analyze threshold = analyze base threshold + analyze scale factor *
There are 850,000 records in vehicleused. And the database is too big to be
kept in memory.
Here are our config settings.
listen_addresses = '*'# what IP address(es) to listen on;
# comma-separa
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 11:35 AM, Kevin Kempter
wrote:
> On Monday 30 August 2010 17:04, bricklen wrote:
>> On Mon, Aug 30, 2010 at 3:28 PM, Kevin Kempter
>>
>> wrote:
>> > Hi all ;
>> >
>> > we have an automated partition creation process that includes the
>> > creation of an FK constraint. we h
On Mon, Aug 30, 2010 at 12:51 PM, Ozer, Pam wrote:
> Yes. ANALYZE was run after we loaded the data. Thanks for your
> assistance
> Here is the full Query.
>
> select distinct VehicleUsed.VehicleUsedId as VehicleUsedId ,
> VehicleUsed.VehicleUsedDisplayPriority as VehicleUsedDisplayPriority ,
>
On Sep 21, 2010, at 2:16 PM, Greg Smith wrote:
> Joshua D. Drake wrote:
>> PostgreSQL's defaults are based on extremely small and some would say
>> (non production) size databases. As a matter of course I always
>> recommend bringing seq_page_cost and random_page_cost more in line.
>>
>
> Also
On Mon, Aug 30, 2010 at 9:46 AM, Eliot Gable wrote:
> Not sure if anyone else saw this, but it struck me as an interesting
> idea if it could be added to PostgreSQL. GPU accelerated database
> operations could be very... interesting. Of course, this could be
> difficult to do in a way that usefull
Joshua D. Drake wrote:
PostgreSQL's defaults are based on extremely small and some would say
(non production) size databases. As a matter of course I always
recommend bringing seq_page_cost and random_page_cost more in line.
Also, they presume that not all of your data is going to be in memo
On Tue, 2010-09-21 at 14:02 -0500, Ogden wrote:
> How odd, I set the following:
>
> seq_page_cost = 1.0
> random_page_cost = 2.0
>
> And now the query runs in milliseconds as opposed to 14 seconds. Could this
> really be the change? I am running ANALYZE now - how often is it recommended
How odd, I set the following:
seq_page_cost = 1.0
random_page_cost = 2.0
And now the query runs in milliseconds as opposed to 14 seconds. Could this
really be the change? I am running ANALYZE now - how often is it recommended to
do this?
Thank you
Ogden
On Sep 21, 2010, at 1:51 PM,
On 2010-09-21 20:21, Ogden wrote:
I assume you mean random_page_cost? It is currently set to 4.0 - is it better
to increase or decrease this value?
Should be lowered to a bit over seq_page_cost.. and more importantly..
you should
make sure that you have updated your statistics .. run "A
I assume you mean random_page_cost? It is currently set to 4.0 - is it better
to increase or decrease this value?
Thank you
Ogden
On Sep 21, 2010, at 1:06 PM, Kenneth Marshall wrote:
> You DB is more than likely cached. You should adjust your
> page costs to better reflect reality and then t
You DB is more than likely cached. You should adjust your
page costs to better reflect reality and then the planner
can make more accurate estimates and then choose the proper
plan.
Cheers,
Ken
On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 12:32:01PM -0500, Ogden wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have received some help from the
Hello,
I have received some help from the IRC channel, however, the problem still
exists. When running the following query with enable_seqscan set to 0, it takes
less than a second, whereas with it set to 1, the query returns in 14 seconds.
The machine itself has 8GB Ram and is running PostgreS
On Mon, Sep 20, 2010 at 6:28 PM, Kevin Grittner
wrote:
> Joe Miller wrote:
>
>> I can set up a cron job to run the ANALYZE manually, but it seems
>> like the autovacuum daemon should be smart enough to figure this
>> out on its own. Deletes can have as big an impact on the stats as
>> inserts an
I was looking at the autovacuum documentation:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/interactive/routine-vacuuming.html#AUTOVACUUM
For analyze, a similar condition is used: the threshold, defined as:
analyze threshold = analyze base threshold + analyze scale factor *
number of tuples
is comp
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