Re: What could lock up pg_stat_activity
От | Marcus Engene |
---|---|
Тема | Re: What could lock up pg_stat_activity |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 4EA6C497.1040006@engene.se обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: What could lock up pg_stat_activity (Steve Crawford <scrawford@pinpointresearch.com>) |
Список | pgsql-novice |
On 10/14/11 6:19 , Steve Crawford wrote: > On 10/14/2011 08:07 AM, Marcus Engene wrote: >> Hi, >> >> I have a site with reasonable # of page loads. I log slow selects so >> I can get panic later. Today I had a 12s period where things stood >> still. >> >> As an overload precaution, for each page I... >> select count(*) as nbr from pg_stat_activity where current_query <> >> '<IDLE>' >> ...to see that not too much is torturing the db. But (roughly) 1/3 of >> the entries was this test above. What could possibly make a count() >> on pg_stat_activity take 12s? Please speculate wildly. >> >> Setup: >> Contemporary Debian >> 72GB >> 4x1TB RAID6 >> 2x100GB RAID1 SSD >> pgbouncer >> private local network >> pg 9.0.4 >> >> Thanks, >> Marcus >> >> > > A bit more info is in order. Is the database handling lots of writes > or mostly simple reads? How much of the database is typically touched? > How big is the database? What data is on the spinning media vs. the > SSD? Do you have battery-backed write-cache? How big is it? > > There are lots of situations with large RAM sizes where the OS allows > so much data to be cached that when a flush to disk occurs, everything > halts till the data is written. > > If you don't have Greg Smith's "PostgreSQL 9.0 High Performance", go > buy it. > > You may find this recent thread interesting, not for the solution but > for the discussion: > http://postgresql.1045698.n5.nabble.com/Adding-more-memory-hugh-cpu-load-td4888181.html#a4888530 > > > Cheers, > Steve > > Hi Steve, It indeed seems to be /proc/sys/vm/dirty_bytes and dirty_background_bytes that were the culput. I think it's when I dump or gzip large files that I provoke this locking. I am however confused as to why pg_stat_activity found it necessary to lock itself just because postgres had a pending fsync. I have both Greg Smiths excellent High Performance book and the other admin book from Packt. Thanks for the answer! Best regards, Marcus
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