On 22 February 2012 23:50, Alessandro Gagliardi <alessandro@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > I have a database where I virtually never delete and almost never do > updates. (The updates might change in the future but for now it's okay to > assume they never happen.) As such, it seems like it might be worth it to > set autovacuum=off or at least make it so vacuuming hardly ever occurs. > Actually, the latter is probably the more robust solution, though I don't > know how to do that (hence me writing this list). I did try turning > autovacuum off but got: > > ERROR: parameter "autovacuum" cannot be changed now > SQL state: 55P02 > > Not sure what, if anything, I can do about that. Autovacuum is controlled by how much of a table has changed, so if a table never changes, it never gets vacuumed (with the exceptional case being a forced vacuum freeze to mitigate the transaction id wrap-around issue). The settings which control this are autovacuum_vacuum_threshold and autovacuum_vacuum_scale_factor. Therefore it isn't necessary to disable autovacuum. But if you are adamant about disabling it, you need to change it in your postgresql.conf file and restart the server. -- Thom -- Sent via pgsql-performance mailing list (pgsql-performance@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-performance