Hi Ron,
Thanks for that. I did just run analyse and vacuum on the live database before I saw your message and it has sorted it out.
Do you think the analyse on its own would have cured it, or would it have been the vacuum? (vacuum took a long time).
Perhaps I should schedule a vacuum to run periodically to stop this happening again – I didn’t think it would be necessary because these aren’t particularly big or heavily-used databases, but it seems I was
wrong.
Also, my assumption that downloading a backup and restoring it locally would replicate the problem would seem to be wrong. Presumably the backup removes any dead stuff, so backup/restore has the same effect
as a vacuum?
Anyway, looks like I was panicking prematurely, but thanks for the help anyway
😊
Rob
From: Ron <ronljohnsonjr@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: 05 April 2019 10:13
To: pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Query much slower on 9.6.5 than on 9.3.5
On 4/5/19 3:43 AM, Rob Northcott wrote:
I’ve had a couple of customers complaining of slow searches and doing some testing last night it seems to be much slower on the live server than on my test setup.
It’s quite a messy query built up by the search code, with lots of joins and subqueries.
I’ve downloaded a backup of the customer’s live database to test, so I’m running the same query on the same data, just two different servers.
On the local test server (PSQL 9.3.5 running on an old Core2 Duo PC) it takes around 200ms to run the query.
On the live server (PSQL 9.6.5 on virtual server with 4 cores) it takes 20 seconds to run the same query.
Looking at the explain analyse, the two servers are using quite different optimisation plans, but I can’t find any differences in the settings.
Is there anything obvious I should look at that may be different between 9.3 and 9.6?
If not, would it help if I post the analyse output on here? (can we post attachments to the group or should it just be text in the email?)
Many thanks for any hints
I'll get the obvious first question out of the way, so that no one else has to ask: have you analyzed the 9.6 database? If not, do that first.
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Angular momentum makes the world go 'round.