Howdy. Some months back, when advised on one of these lists that it should not be necessary to issue VACUUM FULL/REINDEX DATABASE, we quit this nightly "maintenance" practice. We've been very happy to not have to do that, since it locked the database all night. Since then, however, our database performance has decreased. The decrease took a few weeks to become noticable; perhaps six weeks to become awful. I have no objective measurement of the decrease in performance. I have just created a benchmark that exercises our system and used it to measure the current degraded performance. I hope it will show me, objectively, how much any attempted fix improves system performance. One thing I noticed is that when we stopped doing the VACUUM FULL/REINDEX is that the size of the weekly backups (a compressed tarball of main + WAL files) jumped in size. A steady 53GB before we stopped doing the vacuum, the next backup after stopping the VACUUM FULL was 97GB. The backup sizes have grown in the three months since then and are now hovering at around 130GB. We believe, but have no hard numbers to prove, that this growth in physical backup size is out of proportion with the growth of the logical database that we expect due to the slow growth of the business. We are pretty sure we would have noticed the business growing at more than 50% per quarter. I did a VACUUM VERBOSE and looked at the statistics at the end; they seem to indicated that my max_fsm_pages is large enough to keep track of all of the dead rows that are being created (we do a fair amount of deleting as well as inserting). Postgres prints no complaint saying we need more slots, and we have more than the number of slots needed (if I recall, about twice as many). What options do I have for restoring performance other than VACUUM FULL/REINDEX DATABASE? Before trying any fix, what data do I want to collect that might indicate where the performance problem is? Best Regards, Wayne Conrad -- Sent via pgsql-performance mailing list (pgsql-performance@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-performance