On 10/15/24 12:50, Vijaykumar Jain wrote:
Hi,
tl;dr
I am trying to learn what sql can result in a full seq scan.
Basically there is a lot of info on the internet of what ddl change may
take an access exclusive lock while running a seq scan and hold for long.
And for some cases we can make use of
"not valid" constraint and then run a validate constraint as work
arounds to avoid long exclusive locks etc.
but how do we check the same. i mean for dmls there is a explain/
auto_explain.
but for DDLs, how do we check the same.
i tried to isolate my setup and use pg_stat_user_tables and monitor the
same, which helped, but it is not useful as it does not link me to what
process/command invoked the seq scan.
am i clear in my question ?
if yes,
how do i log an alter table that may or may not do a seq scan, that may
or may not rewrite the table file on disk etc.
its a useless question, i am just playing with it for building
knowledge, no requirement as such.
Look at the docs:
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-altertable.html
"Scanning a large table to verify a new foreign key or check constraint
can take a long time, and other updates to the table are locked out
until the ALTER TABLE ADD CONSTRAINT command is committed. The main
purpose of the NOT VALID constraint option is to reduce the impact of
adding a constraint on concurrent updates. With NOT VALID, the ADD
CONSTRAINT command does not scan the table and can be committed
immediately. After that, a VALIDATE CONSTRAINT command can be issued to
verify that existing rows satisfy the constraint. The validation step
does not need to lock out concurrent updates, since it knows that other
transactions will be enforcing the constraint for rows that they insert
or update; only pre-existing rows need to be checked. Hence, validation
acquires only a SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE lock on the table being altered.
(If the constraint is a foreign key then a ROW SHARE lock is also
required on the table referenced by the constraint.) In addition to
improving concurrency, it can be useful to use NOT VALID and VALIDATE
CONSTRAINT in cases where the table is known to contain pre-existing
violations. Once the constraint is in place, no new violations can be
inserted, and the existing problems can be corrected at leisure until
VALIDATE CONSTRAINT finally succeeds."
--
Thanks,
Vijay
Open to work
Resume - Vijaykumar Jain <https://github.com/cabecada>
--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx