From: | Nikolas Everett <nik9000(at)gmail(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | Robert James <srobertjames(at)gmail(dot)com> |
Cc: | Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us>, Chris <dmagick(at)gmail(dot)com>, pgsql-performance(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: Will Postgres ever lock with read only queries? |
Date: | 2009-07-28 14:25:45 |
Message-ID: | d4e11e980907280725x2067a914oa73bf294b9e4178b@mail.gmail.com |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-performance |
Can you run those two queries with psql?
I remember having some trouble running multiple queries in the same pgadmin
process. Both would get stuck until both finished I think. I went to
running a pgadmin process per query.
On Tue, Jul 28, 2009 at 9:17 AM, Robert James <srobertjames(at)gmail(dot)com>wrote:
> Thanks for the replies. I'm running Postgres 8.2 on Windows XP, Intel Core
> Duo (though Postgres seems to use only one 1 core).
> The queries are self joins on very large tables, with lots of nested loops.
>
> On Mon, Jul 27, 2009 at 9:40 PM, Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us> wrote:
>
>> Chris <dmagick(at)gmail(dot)com> writes:
>> > Robert James wrote:
>> >> Hi. I'm seeing some weird behavior in Postgres. I'm running read only
>> >> queries (SELECT that is - no UPDATE or DELETE or INSERT is happening at
>> >> all). I can run one rather complicated query and the results come
>> >> back... eventually. Likewise with another. But, when I run both
>> >> queries at the same time, Postgres seems to ground to a halt.
>>
>> > They're probably not blocking each other but more likely you're
>> > exhausting your servers resources. If they return "eventually"
>> > individually, then running both at the same time will take at least
>> > "eventually x2".
>>
>> It could be a lot more than x2. If the two queries together eat enough
>> RAM to drive the machine into swapping, where it didn't swap while
>> doing one at a time, the slowdown could be orders of magnitude.
>>
>> Watching vmstat output might be informative --- it would at least give
>> an idea if the bottleneck is CPU, I/O, or swap.
>>
>> regards, tom lane
>>
>
>
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