Re: select count(*) very slow on an already vacuumed table. - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From Rajesh Kumar Mallah
Subject Re: select count(*) very slow on an already vacuumed table.
Date
Msg-id 407E3563.6000408@trade-india.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: select count(*) very slow on an already vacuumed table.  (Richard Huxton <dev@archonet.com>)
Responses Re: select count(*) very slow on an already vacuumed table.
Re: select count(*) very slow on an already vacuumed table.
List pgsql-performance

The problem is that i want to know if i need a Hardware upgrade
at the moment.

Eg i have another table rfis which contains ~ .6 million records.


SELECT count(*) from rfis where sender_uid > 0;
+--------+
| count  |
+--------+
| 564870 |
+--------+
Time: 117560.635 ms

Which is approximate 4804 records per second. Is it an acceptable
performance  on the hardware below:

RAM: 2 GB
DISKS: ultra160 , 10 K  , 18 GB
Processor: 2* 2.0 Ghz Xeon

What kind of upgrades shoud be put on the server for it to become
reasonable fast.


Regds
mallah.




Richard Huxton wrote:

>On Wednesday 14 April 2004 18:53, Rajesh Kumar Mallah wrote:
>
>
>>Hi
>>I have .5 million rows in a table. My problem is select count(*) takes
>>ages. VACUUM FULL does not help. can anyone please tell me
>>how to i enhance the performance of the setup.
>>
>>
>
>
>
>>SELECT count(*) from eyp_rfi;
>>
>>
>
>If this is the actual query you're running, and you need a guaranteed accurate
>result, then you only have one option: write a trigger function to update a
>table_count table with every insert/delete to eyp_rfi.
>
>There is loads of info on this (and why it isn't as simple as you might think)
>in the archives. First though:
>1. Is this the actual query, or just a representation?
>2. Do you need an accurate figure or just something "near enough"?
>
>
>


pgsql-performance by date:

Previous
From: Rajesh Kumar Mallah
Date:
Subject: Re: select count(*) very slow on an already vacuumed table.
Next
From: pginfo
Date:
Subject: linux distro for better pg performance