Re: debugging intermittent slow updates under higher load - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Alexey Bashtanov
Subject Re: debugging intermittent slow updates under higher load
Date
Msg-id 56acdbff-1e87-e1f9-3e9e-873685ad0e1e@imap.cc
Whole thread Raw
In response to debugging intermittent slow updates under higher load  (Chris Withers <chris@withers.org>)
Responses Re: debugging intermittent slow updates under higher load
Re: debugging intermittent slow updates under higher load
List pgsql-general
>
> The table has around 1.5M rows which have been updated/inserted around 
> 121M times, the distribution of updates to row in alerts_alert will be 
> quite uneven, from 1 insert up to 1 insert and 0.5M updates.
>
> Under high load (200-300 inserts/updates per second) we see occasional 
> (~10 per hour) updates taking excessively long times (2-10s). These 
> updates are always of the form:
>
> UPDATE "alerts_alert" SET ...bunch of fields... WHERE 
> "alerts_alert"."id" = '...sha1 hash...';
>
> Here's a sample explain:
>
> https://explain.depesz.com/s/Fjq8
>
> What could be causing this? What could we do to debug? What config 
> changes could we make to alleviate this?
>

Hello Chris,

One of the reasons could be the row already locked by another backend, 
doing the same kind of an update or something different.
Are these updates performed in a longer transactions?
Can they hit the same row from two clients at the same time?
Is there any other write or select-for-update/share load on the table?

Have you tried periodical logging of the non-granted locks?
Try querying pg_stat_activity and pg_locks (possibly joined and maybe 
repeatedly self-joined, google for it)
to get the backends that wait one for another while competing for to 
lock the same row or object.

Best,
  Alex


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