Re: [PERFORM] DELETE taking too much memory - Mailing list pgsql-general

From French, Martin
Subject Re: [PERFORM] DELETE taking too much memory
Date
Msg-id 81976671721DF04B9DCA6ECD87941A402B31E830@roundway.Cromwell-tools.co.uk
Whole thread Raw
In response to DELETE taking too much memory  (vincent dephily <vincent.dephily@mobile-devices.fr>)
Responses Re: [PERFORM] DELETE taking too much memory
List pgsql-general
How up to date are the statistics for the tables in question?

What value do you have for effective cache size?

My guess would be that planner thinks the method it is using is right
either for its current row number estimations, or the amount of memory
it thinks it has to play with.

-----Original Message-----
From: pgsql-performance-owner@postgresql.org
[mailto:pgsql-performance-owner@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of vincent
dephily
Sent: 07 July 2011 14:34
To: pgsql-general@postgresql.org; pgsql-performance@postgresql.org
Subject: [PERFORM] DELETE taking too much memory

Hi,

I have a delete query taking 7.2G of ram (and counting) but I do not
understant why so much memory is necessary. The server has 12G, and
I'm afraid it'll go into swap. Using postgres 8.3.14.

I'm purging some old data from table t1, which should cascade-delete
referencing rows in t2. Here's an anonymized rundown :


# \d t1
                             Table "public.t1"
  Column   |            Type             |             Modifiers
-----------+-----------------------------+------------------------------
---
 t1id      | integer                     | not null default
nextval('t1_t1id_seq'::regclass)
(...snip...)
Indexes:
    "message_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
(...snip...)

# \d t2
                               Table "public.t2"
     Column      |            Type             |        Modifiers
-----------------+-----------------------------+------------------------
-----
 t2id            | integer                     | not null default
nextval('t2_t2id_seq'::regclass)
 t1id            | integer                     | not null
 foo             | integer                     | not null
 bar             | timestamp without time zone | not null default now()
Indexes:
    "t2_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (t2id)
    "t2_bar_key" btree (bar)
    "t2_t1id_key" btree (t1id)
Foreign-key constraints:
    "t2_t1id_fkey" FOREIGN KEY (t1id) REFERENCES t1(t1id) ON UPDATE
RESTRICT ON DELETE CASCADE

# explain delete from t1 where t1id in (select t1id from t2 where
foo=0 and bar < '20101101');
                               QUERY PLAN
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----
 Nested Loop  (cost=5088742.39..6705282.32 rows=30849 width=6)
   ->  HashAggregate  (cost=5088742.39..5089050.88 rows=30849 width=4)
         ->  Index Scan using t2_bar_key on t2  (cost=0.00..5035501.50
rows=21296354 width=4)
               Index Cond: (bar < '2010-11-01 00:00:00'::timestamp
without time zone)
               Filter: (foo = 0)
   ->  Index Scan using t1_pkey on t1  (cost=0.00..52.38 rows=1
width=10)
         Index Cond: (t1.t1id = t2.t1id)
(7 rows)


Note that the estimate of 30849 rows is way off : there should be
around 55M rows deleted from t1, and 2-3 times as much from t2.

When looking at the plan, I can easily imagine that data gets
accumulated below the nestedloop (thus using all that memory), but why
isn't each entry freed once one row has been deleted from t1 ? That
entry isn't going to be found again in t1 or in t2, so why keep it
around ?

Is there a better way to write this query ? Would postgres 8.4/9.0
handle things better ?



Thanks in advance.


--
Vincent de Phily

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