Davidson, Robert wrote: > I am doing a vacuum full on a table that takes up 78 GB of a 79 GB HD. When I couldn't add any more data because of out of disk space errors, I freed up space by dropping other tables in the database. I was able to delete about half the records in the table, but the space consumption did not change. I began a vacuum full on the individual table on 3/15 and the hard drive light hasn't turned off since then. > > > > df -h reports 806 MB free and 79 GB used. Is this enough free space to perform a vacuum? Should I export the table, drop it, and re-import it? Yes a pg_dumpall|psql -U is probably in order here. SO this: pg_dumpall, drop database, create database, restore pg_dumpall. This of course assumes that your 78GB is actually bloat and that the backup file is much smaller. Joshua D. Drake > > > > I have implemented data retention policies to keep the amount of data in the table to a more reasonable level in the future and would like to retain what > is currently in there, but will not be heartbroken to lose it. > > > > Many thanks for any tips or advice provided. > > > > Robert > > -- === The PostgreSQL Company: Command Prompt, Inc. === Sales/Support: +1.503.667.4564 || 24x7/Emergency: +1.800.492.2240 Providing the most comprehensive PostgreSQL solutions since 1997 http://www.commandprompt.com/ Donate to the PostgreSQL Project: http://www.postgresql.org/about/donate PostgreSQL Replication: http://www.commandprompt.com/products/