Hi Aleksey, I've read your previous post, and although I'm not quite sure what is the root cause, I have some questions and (maybe wild) guesses ... 1) Are those two machines (primary and DR) exactly the same? I mean CPU, filesystem (including blocksize etc.)? 2) What about database encoding? I think that ASCII on primary and UTF-8 on the DR might have result in such difference in size (but maybe I'm wrong). 3) How exactly have you measured the size of the database? Filesystem (using 'du'), or from pg_* views? 4) The fact that a dump file is significantly smaller than the database is not a big surprise - the reason is that some values are 'shorter' in ASCII than in the original form (e.g. 32-bit integer 0 is encoded as a single char '0' which means 1B instead of 4B). 5) Have you tried to use pageinspect contrib module? It allows you to find out exactly how the data items are organized on a page, so I'd recommend this: a) compare table sizes using system catalogs, select the one with greatest difference b) use pageinspect to display details about one block of the table in both databases and compare the result Maybe this will help you to find out the real cause. regards Tomas > I've dumped the big table from the original database (where it is 61 GB in > size) > and am restoring it into a test database to see what the size is after > the restore. > > As it is now, our DR is offline because we did not expect the database to > nearly double in size upon COPY of the data into a new database. Would > like to > understand what is going on. And would like to not have such a swell of > data > upon transfer. Is there anything I can do, please? > > Best, > Aleksey > > On Tue, Feb 22, 2011 at 12:44 PM, Aleksey Tsalolikhin > <atsaloli.tech@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Hi. ÂLast week our 60 GB database (per psql \l+) was (re-)replicated to >> the DR site using SlonyI, and arrived 109 GB in size which caused a >> problem as it filled up the filesystem on the DR server - we expected >> the >> DR database to be the same size. ÂMystery. >> >> Now just past weekend we upgraded our production server by pg_dump >> and pg_restore, and again the database is 109 GB in size! >> >> Most of our data is in a single table, which on the old server is 50 GB >> in >> size and on the new server is 100 GB in size. >> >> Could you please help us understand why a COPY of the data into a new >> database (whether DR or the new server) results in different disk usage? >> >> Somebody mentioned on the Slony users list that there is a kind of >> padding >> that goes in that actually helps performance. >> >> Is there a way to track disk usage MINUS the padding? >> >> Thanks, >> Aleksey >> > > -- > Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) > To make changes to your subscription: > http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general > -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general