On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 1:48 AM, Scott Marlowe <scott.marl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 10:51 PM, Yang Zhang <yanghates...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> nnnnnOn Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 3:45 PM, Scott Marlowe
>> <scott.marl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> What do things like vmstat 10 say while the query is running on each
>>> db?  First time, second time, things like that.
>>
>> Awesome -- this actually led me to discover the problem.
>>
>> vmstat showed no swapping-out for a while, and then suddenly it
>> started spilling a lot. Checking psql's memory stats showed that it
>> was huge -- apparently, it's trying to store its full result set in
>> memory. As soon as I added a LIMIT 10000, everything worked
>> beautifully and finished in 4m (I verified that the planner was still
>> issuing a Sort).
>>
>> I'm relieved that Postgresql itself does not, in fact, suck, but
>> slightly disappointed in the behavior of psql. I suppose it needs to
>> buffer everything in memory to properly format its tabular output,
>> among other possible reasons I could imagine.
>
> It's best when working with big sets to do so with a cursor and fetch
> a few thousand rows at a time.  It's how we handle really big sets at
> work and it works like a charm in keeping the client from bogging down
> with a huge memory footprint.
>

Thing is, this is how I got here:

- ran complex query that does SELECT INTO.
- that never terminated, so killed it and tried a simpler SELECT (the
subject of this thread) from psql to see how long that would take.

I.e., my original application doesn't receive the entire dataset.
-- 
Yang Zhang
http://www.mit.edu/~y_z/

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