Обсуждение: VACUUM ANALYZE suddenly taking forever

Поиск
Список
Период
Сортировка

VACUUM ANALYZE suddenly taking forever

От
Nolan Cafferky
Дата:
Synopsis: VACUUM ANALYZE on full database used to take just a few
minutes, now it takes several hours, with no apparant improvement in
successive runs.

Details:

I have a production database server hosting two heavily used databases
and not much else.  We're currently running postgres 8.0.8.  Normally we
have a VACUUM ANALYZE run nightly on both databases, which only takes a
couple of minutes each to complete.  We also have a report that runs
hourly on one of the databases and dumps a large amount of data into a
materialized view.  It normally takes 10-20 minutes (we could probably
optimize it, but it's never made it up the priority list).

Anyway, about two nights ago, the hourly report started running
indefinitely, and we've had to turn it off, after having 16 copies of it
waiting in line for the first to finish.  Since then, VACUUM ANALYZE has
been taking several hours instead of several minutes on both databases.
Yesterday I ran the VACUUM ANALYZE manually on both databases, hoping
that there was just some transient cleanup problem, but we've had the
same results today.

What would cause this, and what can I do to fix it?  For the moment, I'm
going to claim the "we didn't change anything!" mantra - no development
we've done in the past few days seems like it would significantly
influence both databases.  The so far untried ideas I've had are:

* Try out the autovacuum service
* Re-index tables (this hasn't been done for at least months, maybe never)
* Do some selective VACUUM FULL on high-use tables (materialized view
for report seems like a likely culprit, but also seems like it wouldn't
influence both databases)
* Restart postgres, restart the machine itself, and other useless handwaving

\begin{more-background-information}

* The database server is a quad Opteron, about 2GHz each.  8 GB of RAM,
and a several hard disk RAID. It's burly. I believe we're running on a
Gentoo linux installation, although postgres was installed from source.
Again, we're running postgres 8.0.8.  Here's some sample output from a
"vmstat 1 5" that I just ran:
procs -----------memory---------- ---swap-- -----io---- --system--
----cpu----
 r  b   swpd   free   buff  cache   si   so    bi    bo   in    cs us sy
id wa
 0  0   1208 5658464      0 2256384    0    0   554   344    1     1 10
2 83  6
 1  0   1208 5640272      0 2273928    0    0    24   476 1405  1885 12
3 83  2
 1  0   1208 5652368      0 2258628    0    0     0   560 1194   663  6
1 91  2
 0  0   1208 5653392      0 2259104    0    0    16   750 1979  4362 15
4 78  2
 1  0   1208 5649744      0 2259716    0    0    24   661 1651  3114 21
4 73  2
* Yes, so far we've been doing a direct VACUUM ANALYZE on everything,
plus VACUUM FULL ANALYZE on a few tables, instead of using the
autovacuum service like we should. It seems like there wouldn't be such
an abrupt change in performace because of that.
* Shortly after killing the 16 or so backed-up reports, the partition
postgres had the data/subtrans directory in filled up, and we had a
bunch of "No space left on device" errors for a minute or two.  The
partitions do deserve some rearranging, but for now we've made some
adjustments and postgres is wallowing in free disk space.

\end{more-background-information}

Suggestions?

--
Nolan Cafferky
Software Developer
IT Department
RBS Interactive
nolan.cafferky@rbsinteractive.com


Re: VACUUM ANALYZE suddenly taking forever

От
Alvaro Herrera
Дата:
Nolan Cafferky wrote:

> The so far untried ideas I've had are:
>
> * Try out the autovacuum service
> * Re-index tables (this hasn't been done for at least months, maybe never)
> * Do some selective VACUUM FULL on high-use tables (materialized view
> for report seems like a likely culprit, but also seems like it wouldn't
> influence both databases)
> * Restart postgres, restart the machine itself, and other useless handwaving

* Check whether there are open, idle transactions and close them

--
Alvaro Herrera                                http://www.CommandPrompt.com/
PostgreSQL Replication, Consulting, Custom Development, 24x7 support

Re: VACUUM ANALYZE suddenly taking forever

От
adey
Дата:
Try running pgstattuple on some of the tables that have not had vacuum full, and some of those that have. It will tell you how many dead tuples there are in the table, which is an indicator of how seriously the table needs a full vacuum.
 
Run IPCS on the Unix command line to see how much of your SHMMAX is being used? You may have reached a threshold in one of the 6 Postgres parameters that use SHMMAX causing a slowdown, like max_fsm_pages (see the report at the end of a database vacuum full output).

 
On 7/28/06, Nolan Cafferky <Nolan.Cafferky@rbsinteractive.com> wrote:
Synopsis: VACUUM ANALYZE on full database used to take just a few
minutes, now it takes several hours, with no apparant improvement in
successive runs.

Details:

I have a production database server hosting two heavily used databases
and not much else.  We're currently running postgres 8.0.8.  Normally we
have a VACUUM ANALYZE run nightly on both databases, which only takes a
couple of minutes each to complete.  We also have a report that runs
hourly on one of the databases and dumps a large amount of data into a
materialized view.  It normally takes 10-20 minutes (we could probably
optimize it, but it's never made it up the priority list).

Anyway, about two nights ago, the hourly report started running
indefinitely, and we've had to turn it off, after having 16 copies of it
waiting in line for the first to finish.  Since then, VACUUM ANALYZE has
been taking several hours instead of several minutes on both databases.
Yesterday I ran the VACUUM ANALYZE manually on both databases, hoping
that there was just some transient cleanup problem, but we've had the
same results today.

What would cause this, and what can I do to fix it?  For the moment, I'm
going to claim the "we didn't change anything!" mantra - no development
we've done in the past few days seems like it would significantly
influence both databases.  The so far untried ideas I've had are:

* Try out the autovacuum service
* Re-index tables (this hasn't been done for at least months, maybe never)
* Do some selective VACUUM FULL on high-use tables (materialized view
for report seems like a likely culprit, but also seems like it wouldn't
influence both databases)
* Restart postgres, restart the machine itself, and other useless handwaving

\begin{more-background-information}

* The database server is a quad Opteron, about 2GHz each.  8 GB of RAM,
and a several hard disk RAID. It's burly. I believe we're running on a
Gentoo linux installation, although postgres was installed from source.
Again, we're running postgres 8.0.8.  Here's some sample output from a
"vmstat 1 5" that I just ran:
procs -----------memory---------- ---swap-- -----io---- --system--
----cpu----
r  b   swpd   free   buff  cache   si   so    bi    bo   in    cs us sy
id wa
0  0   1208 5658464      0 2256384    0    0   554   344    1     1 10
2 83  6
1  0   1208 5640272      0 2273928    0    0    24   476 1405  1885 12
3 83  2
1  0   1208 5652368      0 2258628    0    0     0   560 1194   663  6
1 91  2
0  0   1208 5653392      0 2259104    0    0    16   750 1979  4362 15
4 78  2
1  0   1208 5649744      0 2259716    0    0    24   661 1651  3114 21
4 73  2
* Yes, so far we've been doing a direct VACUUM ANALYZE on everything,
plus VACUUM FULL ANALYZE on a few tables, instead of using the
autovacuum service like we should. It seems like there wouldn't be such
an abrupt change in performace because of that.
* Shortly after killing the 16 or so backed-up reports, the partition
postgres had the data/subtrans directory in filled up, and we had a
bunch of "No space left on device" errors for a minute or two.  The
partitions do deserve some rearranging, but for now we've made some
adjustments and postgres is wallowing in free disk space.

\end{more-background-information}

Suggestions?

--
Nolan Cafferky
Software Developer
IT Department
RBS Interactive
nolan.cafferky@rbsinteractive.com


---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 3: Have you checked our extensive FAQ?

               http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faq

Re: VACUUM ANALYZE suddenly taking forever

От
plongeur@arcor.de
Дата:
Did you try to reset the statistics ? select pg_stat_reset();


On Thursday 27 July 2006 17:28, Nolan Cafferky wrote:
> Synopsis: VACUUM ANALYZE on full database used to take just a few
> minutes, now it takes several hours, with no apparant improvement in
> successive runs.
>
> Details:
>
> I have a production database server hosting two heavily used databases
> and not much else.  We're currently running postgres 8.0.8.  Normally we
> have a VACUUM ANALYZE run nightly on both databases, which only takes a
> couple of minutes each to complete.  We also have a report that runs
> hourly on one of the databases and dumps a large amount of data into a
> materialized view.  It normally takes 10-20 minutes (we could probably
> optimize it, but it's never made it up the priority list).
>
> Anyway, about two nights ago, the hourly report started running
> indefinitely, and we've had to turn it off, after having 16 copies of it
> waiting in line for the first to finish.  Since then, VACUUM ANALYZE has
> been taking several hours instead of several minutes on both databases.
> Yesterday I ran the VACUUM ANALYZE manually on both databases, hoping
> that there was just some transient cleanup problem, but we've had the
> same results today.
>
> What would cause this, and what can I do to fix it?  For the moment, I'm
> going to claim the "we didn't change anything!" mantra - no development
> we've done in the past few days seems like it would significantly
> influence both databases.  The so far untried ideas I've had are:
>
> * Try out the autovacuum service
> * Re-index tables (this hasn't been done for at least months, maybe never)
> * Do some selective VACUUM FULL on high-use tables (materialized view
> for report seems like a likely culprit, but also seems like it wouldn't
> influence both databases)
> * Restart postgres, restart the machine itself, and other useless
> handwaving
>
> \begin{more-background-information}
>
> * The database server is a quad Opteron, about 2GHz each.  8 GB of RAM,
> and a several hard disk RAID. It's burly. I believe we're running on a
> Gentoo linux installation, although postgres was installed from source.
> Again, we're running postgres 8.0.8.  Here's some sample output from a
> "vmstat 1 5" that I just ran:
> procs -----------memory---------- ---swap-- -----io---- --system--
> ----cpu----
>  r  b   swpd   free   buff  cache   si   so    bi    bo   in    cs us sy
> id wa
>  0  0   1208 5658464      0 2256384    0    0   554   344    1     1 10
> 2 83  6
>  1  0   1208 5640272      0 2273928    0    0    24   476 1405  1885 12
> 3 83  2
>  1  0   1208 5652368      0 2258628    0    0     0   560 1194   663  6
> 1 91  2
>  0  0   1208 5653392      0 2259104    0    0    16   750 1979  4362 15
> 4 78  2
>  1  0   1208 5649744      0 2259716    0    0    24   661 1651  3114 21
> 4 73  2
> * Yes, so far we've been doing a direct VACUUM ANALYZE on everything,
> plus VACUUM FULL ANALYZE on a few tables, instead of using the
> autovacuum service like we should. It seems like there wouldn't be such
> an abrupt change in performace because of that.
> * Shortly after killing the 16 or so backed-up reports, the partition
> postgres had the data/subtrans directory in filled up, and we had a
> bunch of "No space left on device" errors for a minute or two.  The
> partitions do deserve some rearranging, but for now we've made some
> adjustments and postgres is wallowing in free disk space.
>
> \end{more-background-information}
>
> Suggestions?