Re: [Again] Postgres performance problem
От | Scott Marlowe |
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Тема | Re: [Again] Postgres performance problem |
Дата | |
Msg-id | dcc563d10709121207q66f09c33ldcd181e4a2876904@mail.gmail.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: [Again] Postgres performance problem ("Mikko Partio" <mpartio@gmail.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: [Again] Postgres performance problem
Re: [Again] Postgres performance problem |
Список | pgsql-performance |
On 9/12/07, Mikko Partio <mpartio@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On 9/12/07, Scott Marlowe <scott.marlowe@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 9/12/07, ruben@rentalia.com <ruben@rentalia.com> wrote: > > > > > Try a REINDEX. VACUUM FULL is especially hard on the indexes, and it's > > > > easy for them to seriously bloat. > > > > > > Reindex is done everyday after VACUUM FULL VERBOSE ANALYZE. I save also > > > the output averyday and save it into a log, and I can check that it is > > > done properly. > > > > Then you're vacuum full is wasted. A reindex accomplishes the same > > thing, plus shrinks indexes (vacuum full can bloat indexes). > > Aren't you mixing up REINDEX and CLUSTER? I don't think so. reindex (which runs on tables and indexes, so the name is a bit confusing, I admit) basically was originally a "repair" operation that rewrote the whole relation and wasn't completely transaction safe (way back, 7.2 days or so I think). Due to the issues with vacuum full bloating indexes, and being slowly replaced by regular vacuum, reindex received some attention to make it transaction / crash safe and has kind of take the place of vacuum full in terms of "how to fix bloated objects". cluster, otoh, rewrites the table into index order. Either one does what a vacuum full did / does, but generally does it better.
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