From: | "Thomas H(dot)" <me(at)alternize(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | "Heikki Linnakangas" <heikki(at)enterprisedb(dot)com> |
Cc: | "Tom Lane" <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us>, <pgsql-bugs(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
Subject: | Re: 8.2rc1: vacuum full fills up disk space |
Date: | 2006-11-27 18:04:38 |
Message-ID: | 0faa01c7124e$81d09cb0$0201a8c0@iwing |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-bugs |
>> well yes, as the system is "live", users are browsing the website. but
>> all queries that try to access the table in question are stalled at the
>> moment. when querying server status i'm seeing lots of queries that are
>> waiting for access to the table.
>>
>> would vacuum freeze be faster?
>
> Vacuum freeze won't move tuples so it won't reclaim any more space than a
> normal vacuum. Cluster, however, rewrites the whole table and compacts the
> space, and runs faster than vacuum full on a badly bloated table. It will
> also recreate all indexes.
will give it a try later on, thanks!
>
> In the future, instead of updating a whole table with UPDATE, you should
> consider doing a SELECT INTO to create a new table, dropping the old table
> and renaming the new one in place of the old one.
the problem is: the table was far from being bloated, IMO. it was 2 days
old, every record at most 2-3 times updated. the space needed for the table
dropped from 400mb to roughly 200mb after the 1.5hr vacuum full...
i've never had such a long vacuuming time before, even on tables that are
much larger and contains more dead rows. the table uses tsearch2 and a
gin-index, could that be the problem? the gin faq says a drop/create index
would be much faster than a reindex. maybe this is also true when vacuuming
a table with a gin-index?
- thomas
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