On 10/22/2004 12:23 PM, Michael Paesold wrote:
> D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:
>> I have an idea for a change to the contributed module pg_autovacuum that
>> I would like to run by people. What I want to do is make sure that when
>> vacuum (or analyze) runs that it takes no time from actual transactions.
>> To this end I want to add an option (-n?) which runs nice(2) on the
>> process ID of the backend.
>>
>> I realize that there will be a limitation that this can only work when
>> pg_autovacuum is running on the same host as the server. I plan to
>> handle that by ignoring the new option if the -h option (or equivalent
>> environment variable) is also set.
>>
>> The big question I have is this. Is this strategy likely to improve my
>> transaction processing?
>
> There is a much better way available in PostgreSQL 8.0 to reduce the impact
> of VACUUM: cost-based vacuum delay.
> See: http://developer.postgresql.org/docs/postgres/runtime-config.html
And looking at how my test systems perform under TPC-W load with
PostgreSQL 8.0 and Slony-I 1.0.5 right now I can confirm that this is
the right path. I have of course pg_autovacuum running and vacuum delay
is enabled. The main database server rolls like a Sherman Tank through
backyard fences ... everything just level without any bumps or dips ...
and that even under a load of 20+.
Jan
>
> There are five GUC-variables that control vacuum delay. The most important
> is vacuum_cost_delay(int), because it actually enables (value >0) or
> disables (value =0) the feature.
>
> This can be set during runtime via SET. The default value for
> vacuum_cost_delay is currently 0.
>
> So what you could do, is make a new option in pg_autovacuum that will set
> vacuum_cost_delay before executing vacuum. So one can leave
> vacuum_cost_delay at zero in postgresql.conf, but enable it for background
> vacuum in pg_autovacuum.
>
> Best Regards,
> Michael Paesold
>
>
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