Make that: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.1/static/monitoring.html 8.1 docs rather.. :)--Husam
From: pgsql-admin-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pgsql-admin-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Tomeh, Husam
Sent: Wednesday, September 20, 2006 11:22 AM
To: Aaron Bono; pgsql admin
Subject: Re: [ADMIN] Monitoring ConnectionsQuery the pg_stat_activity.For more detailed stats activities, you may query the pg_stat_* and pg_statio_* system views.--Husam
Is there a way to get diagnostics on current connections to the database? Specifically I am looking for:
From: pgsql-admin-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pgsql-admin-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Aaron Bono
Sent: Wednesday, September 20, 2006 10:48 AM
To: pgsql admin
Subject: [ADMIN] Monitoring Connections
1. How many current connections are there?
2. Who is connected (user name, database and from what IP address)?
3. When was the last time the connection was used?
4. When was the connection established?
I can get most of this information from the ps command but am having problem with getting the information on #3.
My problem is that I have a number of web sites running on the server all using different databases and/or user log ins and also using connection pooling. Whenever I redeploy an application, the "old" connections do not appear to disconnect but new connections are established. I fear that, since the application server is not actually restarting but just reloading the application, it is keeping old connections open when they really should be closed. This is something I will need to fix in the application but I need to do some digging before I know this is indeed the problem.
I am using PostgreSQL 8.1.3 on CentOS.
Thanks!
Is there any way to find out the last time the connection was used?
Thanks,
Aaron
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Aaron Bono
Aranya Software Technologies, Inc.
http://www.aranya.com
http://codeelixir.com
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