On 12/3/20 11:16 AM, Tom Lane wrote:
> Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com> writes:
>> On Thu, Dec 03, 2020 at 08:43:57PM +0530, Ravikumar Reddy wrote:
>>> When I try to do a delete like this: it hangs for an entire day, so I
>>> need to kill it with pg_terminate_backend(pid).
>>>
>>> DELETE FROM feed_posts
>>> WHERE feed_definition_id = 'bf33573d-936e-4e55-8607-72b685d2cbae'
>>> AND created_at > '2020-05-11 00:00:00'
>>> AND created_at < '2020-05-12 00:00:00';
> 90% of the "delete takes forever" complaints that we hear trace down to
> having a foreign key reference to the deletion-target table that's not
> backed by an index on the referencing column. Then you end up getting
> a seqscan on the referencing table to look for rows referencing a
> row-to-be-deleted. And then another one for the next row. Etc.
>
> You could try "explain analyze" on a query deleting just a single
> one of these rows and see if an RI enforcement trigger is what's
> eating the time.
>
>
Yeah. IIRC some other RDBMS systems actually create such an index if it
doesn't already exist. Maybe we should have a warning when setting up an
FK constraint if the referencing fields aren't usefully indexed.
cheers
andrew
--
Andrew Dunstan
EDB: https://www.enterprisedb.com