Re: How to monitor resources on Linux.

From: John R Allgood <jallgood(at)the-allgoods(dot)net>
To: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre(at)commandprompt(dot)com>
Cc: Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us>, pgsql-admin(at)postgresql(dot)org
Subject: Re: How to monitor resources on Linux.
Date: 2007-08-28 19:40:03
Message-ID: 46D47A13.3060907@the-allgoods.net
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We are using the defaults for these values. Keep in mind we are allowing
between 5-50 max connections per postmaster. Here is an example of our
largest database. It is 7.9GB we allow 50 max connections and the
buffers are set to 16000/125MB. This is our master database and it has a
lot of activity as compared to the other databases. We run VACUUM at
midday VACUUM FULL at night, VACUUM ANALYZE on weekends.

Thanks

Alvaro Herrera wrote:
> John R Allgood wrote:
>
>> Hey Tom
>>
>> Thanks for responding. This issue came around because of a situation
>> yesterday with processes being killed off by the kernel. I believe my co
>> worker Geof Myers sent a post yesterday and the response was to adjust the
>> vm.commit_memory=2. Several time throughout the day we see memory usage
>> peak and then it will go down. We have multiple postmasters running for
>> each of our division so that I we have a problem with a database it only
>> affects that one. It make it diffucult to tune a system with this many
>> postmasters running. Each database is tuned according to need. We allow
>> anywhere between 5-50 max connections. So what I am looking for is?
>>
>
> Any of work_mem or maintenance_worm_mem set too high can cause excessive
> memory usage. What do you have these set to?
>
>

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