> From: Peter Geoghegan <pg@xxxxxxx> > Sent: July 9, 2019 1:47 PM > Subject: Re: REINDEX : new parameter to preserve current average leaf density as new implicit FILLFACTOR > > On Tue, Jul 9, 2019 at 10:31 AM John Lumby <johnlumby@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Yes, I see that. But surely "making splits occur less often" is a desirable > > objective in itself, is it not? And I believe that a parameter to preserve the "steady-state" > > density in high-traffic indexes would help achieve that goal, wouldn't you agree? > > Anything that reliably reduces page splits without hurting space > utilization is well worthwhile. I can't see how what you describe > could have that effect, though. If you expect the leaf density to be > the same after a REINDEX, then why bother at all? There is no reason > to think that that will be more effective than simple vacuuming. > Ah, I did not explain the idea welll enough. The scenario (simplified) is this: Time 0 FILLFACTORs all set to default 90% because we do not yet know what the steady-state density will turn out to be. { workload runs for a few weeks } Time N gather table and index stats, discover growth and learn density. growth is more than autovacuum could control so { ALTER INDEX ??? SET (fillfactor = AUTO); } { REINDEX, desiring to preserve current density whatever this is } { workload runs for a few more weeks } Time 2*N gather table and index stats, discover little or no growth since time N. we have achieved steady-state in total number of pages. Would this not work? Cheers, John