Dylan Luong wrote: > We perform nighty base backup of our production PostgreSQL instance. We have a script that basically puts the instance > into back mode and then backs up (tar) the /Data directory and then takes it out of backup mode. > Ie, > psql -c "SELECT pg_start_backup('${DATE}');" > tar -cvf - ${DATA_DIR} --exclude ${DATA_DIR}/pg_log | split -d -b $TAR_SPLIT_SIZE - ${BACKUP_DIR}/${BACKUP_NAME} > psql -c "SELECT pg_stop_backup();" > > The size of our database is about 250GB and it usually takes about 1 hour to backup. > During this time, we have performance issue where queries can take up to 15secs to return where normally it takes 2 to 3 seconds. > During this time (1:30am) usage is low (less than 10 users) on the system. > > Has anyone experience the same problem and any suggestions where to look at to resolve the problem? The "tar" is probably taking up too much I/O bandwidth. Assuming this is Linux, you could run it with ionice -c 2 -n 7 tar ... or ionice -c 3 tar ... Of course then you can expect the backup to take more time. Yours, Laurenz Albe -- Cybertec | https://www.cybertec-postgresql.com