Excerpts from Justin Pasher's message of jue may 20 16:10:53 -0400 2010: > Whenever I clear out the stats for all of the databases, the file > shrinks down to <1MB. However, it only takes about a day for it to get > back up to ~18MB and then the stats collector process start the heavy > disk writing again. I do know there are some tables in the database that > are filled and emptied quite a bit (they are used as temporary "queue" > tables). The code will VACUUM FULL ANALYZE after the table is emptied to > get the physical size back down and update the (empty) stats. A plain > ANALYZE is also run right after the table is filled but before it starts > processing, so the planner will have good stats on the contents of the > table. Would this lead to pg_stat file bloat like I'm seeing? Would a > CLUSTER then ANALYZE instead of a VACUUM FULL ANALYZE make any > difference? The VACUUM FULL code was setup quite a while back before the > coders knew about CLUSTER. I wonder if we should make pgstats write one file per database (plus one for shared objects), instead of keeping everything in a single file. That would reduce the need for reading and writing so much. -- -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general