Hello everybody,
I'm facing a simple yet gravely problem with postgresql 7.3.2 on x86 Linux.
My db is used to store IP accounting statistics for about 30 C's. There are
a couple truly trivial tables such as the one below:
CREATE TABLE stats_min
(
ip inet NOT NULL,
start timestamp NOT NULL default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP(0),
intlen int4 NOT NULL default 60,
d_in int8 NOT NULL,
d_out int8 NOT NULL,
constraint "stats_min_pkey" PRIMARY KEY ("ip", "start")
);
CREATE INDEX stats_min_start ON stats_min (start);
A typical transaction committed on these tables looks like this:
BEGIN WORK
DELETE ...
UPDATE/INSERT ...
COMMIT WORK
Trouble is, as the rows in the tables get deleted/inserted/updated
(the frequency being a couple thousand rows per minute), the database
is growing out of proportion in size. After about a week, I have
to redump the db by hand so as to get query times back to sensible
figures. A transaction that takes ~50 seconds before the redump will
then complete in under 5 seconds (the corresponding data/base/ dir having
shrunk from ~2 GB to ~0.6GB).
A nightly VACCUM ANALYZE is no use.
A VACUUM FULL is no use.
A VACUUM FULL followed by REINDEX is no use.
It seems that only a full redump involving "pg_dump olddb | \
psql newdb" is capable of restoring the system to its working
glory.
Please accept my apologies if I've overlooked a relevant piece of
information in the docs. I'm in an urgent need of getting this
problem resolved.
--
Tomas Szepe <szepe@pinerecords.com>