Equivalent of Oracle's per-session statistics (v$client_stats)? - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Frits Jalvingh
Subject Equivalent of Oracle's per-session statistics (v$client_stats)?
Date
Msg-id CAKhTGFWGO-+iw1ccKaZ7HyEs7J6bNuMsWJHMuj079OUhpauFbA@mail.gmail.com
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Responses Re: Equivalent of Oracle's per-session statistics (v$client_stats)?  (Magnus Hagander <magnus@hagander.net>)
List pgsql-general
Hello list,

Oracle has a way to get per-session statistics. You identify a session using a call to dbms_session.set_identifier('xxx'), then you enable statistics using dbms_monitor.client_id_stat_enable('xxx').
After this you do normal database statements.
Before you close the connection you can read a view, v$client_stats, which now contains all kinds of metrics specifically to your connection's use. Metrics that can be read are things like the number of logical blocks read, physical blocks read etc.
Using this mechanism you can show exactly how "bad" for instance a screen from an application behaves, by finding out how much database I/O it does.

I was wondering whether Postgresql has something like this? I looked at the pg_stats tables but I do not see anything that can be related to the "current session" or "current connection".

Thanks for your time.

Regards,

Frits

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