Re: Finding detailed information about LOCKS - Mailing list pgsql-admin

From Laurenz Albe
Subject Re: Finding detailed information about LOCKS
Date
Msg-id 28414c4c93ffa0ceab8a475747825de558ddf1ea.camel@cybertec.at
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Finding detailed information about LOCKS  (Wasim Devale <wasimd60@gmail.com>)
Responses Re: Finding detailed information about LOCKS
List pgsql-admin
On Fri, 2024-05-03 at 11:52 +0530, Wasim Devale wrote:
> On Fri, 3 May, 2024, 11:46 am Laurenz Albe, <laurenz.albe@cybertec.at> wrote:
> > On Fri, 2024-05-03 at 10:54 +0530, Siraj G wrote:
> > > I come from Oracle background. In Oracle there is a licensed feature (Diagnostics + Tuning)
> > > upon using which the system keeps historic session records, which gives a better way
> > > to find out locking related details- like the blocking session, total sessions blocked
> > > and the time the blocking event was active. I am finding it a little hard in PgSQL
> > > to find this information. 
> > >
> > > I am seeking help in finding a detailed analysis on the locks that happened yesterday,
> > > 2 days back or in the last week. Can someone assist please.
> >
> > PostgreSQL doesn't keep historical information on these things.
> >
> > You need a monitoring tool like pgwatch2 that takes regular snapshots of these data
> > and allows you to access this information.
>
> Can we not use pgbadger?

pgBadger can only collect what is in the log file.  How would you get that information
into the log file?  The best you can get in the log file is the information from
"log_lock_waits = on", which is information about situations where somebody had to
wait for a lock for more than a second.  Definitely useful, but capturing "pg_stat_activity"
snapshots will provide more infrmation.

Yours,
Laurenz Albe



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