I recently had a puzzling experience (performace related). Had a DB running presumably smoothly, on a server with Dual-Core Opteron and 4GB of RAM (and SATA2 drives with Hardware RAID-1). (PostgreSQL 8.2.4 installed from source, on a FC4 system --- databases with no encoding --- initdb -E SQL_ASCII --no-locale, and all the databases created with encoding SQL_ASCII) We thought that performance had gone little by little down, but the evidence now suggests that something must have triggered a big step down in the performance of the server. Thinking that it was simply a bottleneck with the hardware, we moved to a different machine (lower performance CPU-wise, but with dual hard disk, so I configured the pg_xlog directory on a partition on a separate hard disk, estimating that this would take precedence over the lower CPU power and the 2GB of RAM instead of 4). Not only the performance was faster --- a query like: select count(*) from customer was *instantaneous* on the new machine (just after populating it, without having even analyzed it!), and would take over a minute on the old machine (the first time). Then, the second time, it would take a little over two seconds on the old machine (at this point, both machines had *zero* activity --- they were both essentially disconnected from the outside world; serving exclusively my psql connection). Funny thing, I dropped the database (on the old machine) and re-created it with the backup I had just created, and now the performance on the old one was again normal (the above query now gives me a result in essentially no time --- same as on the new machine). In retrospect, I'm now wondering if a vacuum full would have solved the issue? (we do run vacuumdb -z --- vacuum analyze --- daily) Any comments?? I'm worried that three months down the road we'll face the same issue with this new server (that's about the time it took since we had started running the other server until we noticed the poor performance level) --- and we can not afford to completely stop the system to drop-and-recreate the db on a regular basis. Thanks, Carlos -- ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: You can help support the PostgreSQL project by donating at http://www.postgresql.org/about/donate