On 19 September 2018 at 21:18, Sam R. <samruohola@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Ok. So, we should set also shared_buffers big. It might not be quite as beneficial as you might think. If your database is larger than RAM often having a smaller shared_buffers setting yields better performance. The reason is that if you have a very large shared_buffers that the same buffers can end up cached in the kernel page cache and shared buffers. If you have a smaller shared buffers setting then the chances of that double buffering are reduced and the chances of finding a page cached somewhere increases. However, if your database is quite small and you can afford to fit all your data in shared buffers, with enough free RAM for everything else, then you might benefit from a large shared buffers, but it's important to also consider that some operations, such as DROP TABLE can become slow of shared buffers is very large. You might get more specific recommendations if you mention how much RAM the server has and how big the data is now and will be in the future. -- David Rowley http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services