On 30-Aug-06, at 10:10 AM, Vivek Khera wrote:
On Aug 30, 2006, at 5:29 AM, Matthew Sullivan wrote:
The hardware is a Compaq 6400r with 4G of EDO RAM, 4x500MHz Xeons
and a Compaq RAID 3200 in RAID 5 configuration running across 3
spindles (34G total space).
The OS is FreeBSD 5.4-RELEASE-
Matthew Sullivan wrote:
The OS is FreeBSD 5.4-RELEASE-p14
The PG Version is 8.1.3
Solutions/tips greatly appreciated.
This won't help this particular query, but 6.1-RELEASE will possibly be
a better performer generally, in particular for your SMP system - e.g.
the vfs layer is no longer u
Vivek Khera wrote:
On Aug 30, 2006, at 5:29 AM, Matthew Sullivan wrote:
The hardware is a Compaq 6400r with 4G of EDO RAM, 4x500MHz Xeons
and a Compaq RAID 3200 in RAID 5 configuration running across 3
spindles (34G total space).
The OS is FreeBSD 5.4-RELEASE-p14
The PG Version is 8.1.3
I have tried this to no avail.
I have also tried changing the bg_writer_delay parameter to 10. The spike in i/o still occurs although not in a consistent basis and it is only happening for a few seconds.
On 8/30/06, Jignesh K. Shah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The bgwriter parameters changed in 8
On Wed, 30 Aug 2006, Jim C. Nasby wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 30, 2006 at 10:10:28AM -0400, Vivek Khera wrote:
> > effective_cache_size = 27462# `sysctl -n
> > vfs.hibufspace` / 8192 (BLKSZ)
> > random_page_cost = 2
>
> You misunderstand how effective_cache_size is used. It's the *only*
> mem
The bgwriter parameters changed in 8.1
Try
bgwriter_lru_maxpages=0
bgwriter_lru_percent=0
to turn off bgwriter and see if there is any change.
-Jignesh
Junaili Lie wrote:
Hi Jignesh,
Thank you for my reply.
I have the setting just like what you described:
wal_sync_method = fsync
wal_buffer
On Wednesday 30 August 2006 03:48, Willo van der Merwe
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Rusty,
>
> Good ideas and I've implemented some of them, and gained about 10%. I'm
> still sitting on a load avg of about 60.
>
> Any ideas on optimizations on my postgresql.conf, that might have an
> effect?
I
On Wed, Aug 30, 2006 at 10:10:28AM -0400, Vivek Khera wrote:
> effective_cache_size = 27462# `sysctl -n
> vfs.hibufspace` / 8192 (BLKSZ)
> random_page_cost = 2
You misunderstand how effective_cache_size is used. It's the *only*
memory factor that plays a role in cost estimator functi
On 8/30/06, Willo van der Merwe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
This was just an example. All queries have slowed down. Could it be that
I've reached some cut-off and now my disk is thrashing?
Currently the load looks like this:
Cpu0 : 96.8% us, 1.9% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id, 0.0% wa, 0.0% hi, 1.0
Dave Dutcher wrote:
That's an interesting situation. Your CPU's are pegged, and you're
hardly doing any IO. I wonder if there is some ineficient query, or
if its just very high query volume. Maybe you could try setting
log_min_duration_statement to try to track down the slowest of the
queri
On Aug 30, 2006, at 5:29 AM, Matthew Sullivan wrote:
The hardware is a Compaq 6400r with 4G of EDO RAM, 4x500MHz Xeons
and a Compaq RAID 3200 in RAID 5 configuration running across 3
spindles (34G total space).
The OS is FreeBSD 5.4-RELEASE-p14
The PG Version is 8.1.3
What else does this
Title: Message
That's an
interesting situation. Your CPU's are pegged, and you're hardly doing any
IO. I wonder if there is some ineficient query, or if its just very high
query volume. Maybe you could try setting log_min_duration_statement to
try to track down the slowest of the queries.
Dave Cramer wrote:
On 30-Aug-06, at 7:35 AM, Willo van der Merwe wrote:
Luke Lonergan wrote:
Currently the load looks like this:
Cpu0 : 96.8% us, 1.9% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id, 0.0% wa, 0.0% hi,
1.0% si
Cpu1 : 97.8% us, 1.6% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id
On 30-Aug-06, at 7:35 AM, Willo van der Merwe wrote:
Luke Lonergan wrote:
Currently the load looks like this:
Cpu0 : 96.8% us, 1.9% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id, 0.0% wa, 0.0%
hi, 1.0% si
Cpu1 : 97.8% us, 1.6% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id, 0.0% wa, 0.0%
hi, 0.3% si
Cpu2 : 96.8% us, 2.6% sy
Alex Hayward wrote:
On Wed, 30 Aug 2006, Willo van der Merwe wrote:
Merlin Moncure wrote:
On 8/29/06, Willo van der Merwe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
and it has 743321 rows and a explain analyze select count(*) from
property_values;
you have a number of options:
That's exactly what I'm experiencing.
Everything was fine until yesterday, when we noticed a considerable site
slow-down. Graphs showed the server suddenly spiking to a load of 67. At
first I thought somebody executed a ran-away query, so I restarted
postgres, but after it came back up, it cli
On Wed, 30 Aug 2006, Willo van der Merwe wrote:
> Merlin Moncure wrote:
> > On 8/29/06, Willo van der Merwe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >> and it has 743321 rows and a explain analyze select count(*) from
> >> property_values;
> >>
> >
> > you have a number of options:
> All good ideas and I
Interesting - in this quick snapshot there is no I/O happening at all.
What happens when you track the activity for a longer period of time?
How about just capturing vmstat during a period when the queries are
slow?
Has the load average been this high forever or are you experiencing a
growth in w
Luke Lonergan wrote:
Currently the load looks like this:
Cpu0 : 96.8% us, 1.9% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id, 0.0% wa,
0.0% hi, 1.0% si
Cpu1 : 97.8% us, 1.6% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id, 0.0% wa,
0.0% hi, 0.3% si
Cpu2 : 96.8% us, 2.6% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id, 0.0% wa,
0.0% hi, 0.3% si
Cpu3
Rusty Conover wrote:
On Aug 29, 2006, at 7:52 AM, Willo van der Merwe wrote:
Hi,
We're running PostgreSQL 8.1.4 on CentOS 4 (Linux version
2.6.9-34.0.1.ELsmp). Hardware specs:
2x AMD Dual-Core Opteron 270 Italy 1Ghz HT 2 x 1MB L2 Cache Socket 940
4 GB Registered ECC PC3200 DDR RAM
SuperMicr
> Currently the load looks like this:
> Cpu0 : 96.8% us, 1.9% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id, 0.0% wa,
> 0.0% hi, 1.0% si
> Cpu1 : 97.8% us, 1.6% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id, 0.0% wa,
> 0.0% hi, 0.3% si
> Cpu2 : 96.8% us, 2.6% sy, 0.0% ni, 0.3% id, 0.0% wa,
> 0.0% hi, 0.3% si
> Cpu3 : 96.2%
All,
Got a little bit of a performance problem I hope that can be resolved.
All the files/info I believe you are going to ask for are here:
http://www.au.sorbs.net/~matthew/postgres/30.8.06/
The odd thing was it originally was fast (1-2 seconds) which is all I
need - the query is a permission
Merlin Moncure wrote:
On 8/29/06, Willo van der Merwe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
and it has 743321 rows and a explain analyze select count(*) from
property_values;
you have a number of options:
All good ideas and I'll be sure to implement them later.
I am curious why you need to query th
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