On Fri, Jun 1, 2012 at 10:34 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
> Lonni J Friedman <netllama@gmail.com> writes:
>> Running 9.1.3 on Linux-x86_64. I'm seeing autovacuum running for the
>> past 6 hours on a newly created table that only has 1 row of data in
>> it. This table did exist previously, but was dropped & recreated.
>> I'm not sure if that might explain this behavior. When I strace the
>> autovacuum process, I see the following scrolling by non-stop (with no
>> changes to the file referenced):
>> select(0, NULL, NULL, NULL, {0, 21000}) = 0 (Timeout)
>> open("base/16412/214803_vm", O_RDWR) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
>> open("base/16412/214803_vm", O_RDWR) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
>> open("base/16412/214803_vm", O_RDWR) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
>> open("base/16412/214803_vm", O_RDWR) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
>> open("base/16412/214803_vm", O_RDWR) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
>> open("base/16412/214803_vm", O_RDWR) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
>
> This seems to have been noticed and fixed in HEAD:
> http://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git&a=commitdiff&h=b4e0741727685443657b55932da0c06f028fbc00
> I wonder whether that should've been back-patched.
Thanks for your reply. I won't even pretend to understand what that
fix does. Is this behavior something that is blatantly broken, or
harmless, or somewhere in between? Should I expect autovacuum to
eventually complete succesfully when it stumbles into this scenario?
>
> In the meantime, though, it sure looks like you've got a lot more than
> one row in there. Perhaps you did umpteen zillion updates on that one
> row?
Before dropping & recreating the table, yes it had millions of rows,
and millions of updates. But since then, all I did was insert a
single row, and watched autovacuum wedge itself in that seemingly
infinite loop. I ended up doing a 'kill -2' on the autovacuum PID
that was misbehaving, disabled autovacuuming the table, and went about
what I needed to get done as an interim solution.