Re: what are the things that occupy the session memory.
От | Andy Fan |
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Тема | Re: what are the things that occupy the session memory. |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 87zfnhkgm5.fsf@163.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: what are the things that occupy the session memory. (Tomas Vondra <tomas@vondra.me>) |
Список | pgsql-bugs |
Tomas Vondra <tomas@vondra.me> writes: > Anyway, I agree shared buffers 70GB is way too high - I'd reduce that to > maybe 8GB and only increase that if cache hit ratio is below 0.95 or > so. I'm always confused how should shared_buffers be set initially (saying monitor and adjust them later is not free.) Some places say 25% of physical memory but I don't know why is that. I'm not sure my question can have a answer, but just have a try. The known drawback of big shared buffer from me includes: a). Seize the memory from other component which may contribute to OOM. b). make some operation slower. e.g. drop / truncate table. > If not, try reducing work_mem. If you're doing OLTP queries, those > likely don't need wm=300MB (why did you set this value?). For OLAP > queries 300MB might make sense, but then maybe you shouldn't have 300 of > them. I want to have a metion of autovacuum_work_mem/maintenance_work_mem for a OLTP workload. In OLTP workload, user probably doesn't need a bigger work_mem but if user set it to a bigger value, it should not cause a big issue IIUC, since it just set a upper bound. However in OLTP workload, it probably has lots of updates/delete, and if they have lots of tables, it probably use up to {autovacuum_work_mem} memory per vacuum worker, which is more likely cause an issue. -- Best Regards Andy Fan
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