On 10/4/07, Josh Trutwin <josh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > We have a pretty busy linux server running postgres 8.1.4, waiting to > upgrade until 8.3 to avoid dump/restoring twice. You should immediate update your version to 8.1.whateverislatest. That requires no dump / restore and it is a bug fix update. I doubt this problem is because you're out of date on patches, but who knows... > # cat /proc/meminfo > total: used: free: shared: buffers: cached: > Mem: 3704217600 3592069120 112148480 0 39460864 2316271616 > Swap: 2516918272 270336 2516647936 Well, you've got plenty of memory, and a large chunk is being used as cache. > The postgresql.conf was basically the default so I decided to > increase the cache size and a couple paramaters to make more use of > that memory - here's what I did: > > shared_buffers = 16384 (was 1000) > work_mem = 16384 (was 1024) > wal_buffers = 24 (was 8) > checkpoint_segments = 5 (was 3) > effective_cache_size = 10000 (was 1000) > stats_command_string = on (was off) > stats_block_level = on (was off) > stats_row_level = on (was off) Your changes seem reasonable. > Also, the entire cluster gets vacuumed analyzed nightly. You should look into running the autovacuum daemon. for heavily used databases nightly vacuuming may not be enough. > After making these changes, the performance on the server actually > worsened. I slowly backed off on some of the paramaters but didn't > seem to help. Most likely turning on stats collection slowed you down a bit. We need to see examples of what's slow, including explain analyze output for slow queries. Also a brief explanation of the type of load your database server is seeing. I.e. is it a lot of little transactions, mostly read, batch processing, lots of users, one user, etc... Right now we don't have enough info to really help you. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org