"Bannert Matthias" <bannert@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > [ very deep stack of parser transformExprRecurse calls ] > #20137 0x00007fe7fb80ab8c in pg_analyze_and_rewrite (parsetree=parsetree@entry=0x7fe7fffdb2a0, query_string=query_string@entry=0x7fe7fdf606b0 "INSERT INTO ts_updates(ts_key, ts_data, ts_frequency) VALUES ('some_id.sector_all.news_all_d',hstore('1900-01-01','-0.395131869823009')||hstore('1900-01-02','-0.395131869823009')||hstore('1"..., paramTypes=paramTypes@entry=0x0, numParams=numParams@entry=0) at /build/postgresql-9.3-G1RSAD/postgresql-9.3-9.3.11/build/../src/backend/tcop/postgres.c:640 The SQL fragment we can see here suggests that your "40K entry hstore" is getting built up by stringing together 40K hstore concatenation operators. Don't do that. Even without the parser stack depth issue, it's uselessly inefficient. I presume you're generating this statement mechanically, not by hand, so you could equally well have the app emit '1900-01-01 => -0.395131869823009, 1900-01-02 => -0.395131869823009, ...'::hstore which would look like a single hstore literal to the parser, and be processed much more quickly. If you insist on emitting SQL statements that have operators nested to such depths, then yes you'll need to increase max_stack_depth to whatever it takes to allow it. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general