OK, it's quite some time from when the original question was posted, but now I have more data... see below. On Thu, 2005-09-29 at 19:24, Jim C. Nasby wrote: > On Tue, Sep 27, 2005 at 10:24:02AM +0200, Csaba Nagy wrote: > > Hi all, > > > > I've recently asked a similar question, which received no useful answer > > yet, so I'll drop in too. > > > > In my case, the table I was inserting to was a quite big one already to > > start with (and analyzed so), so I was expecting that it will not slow > > down due to indexes, as they were quite big to start with as I said. > > > > What I mean is that I expected that the speed will be more or less > > constant over the whole inserting. But the result was that after a while > > the average insert speed dropped considerably and suddenly, which I > > can't explain and would like to know what caused it... > > The table was ~100 million live rows and quite often updated, and the > > insert was ~40 million rows. After ~10 million rows the average speed > > dropped suddenly about 4 times. > > > > My only suspicion would be that the table had a quite big amount of free > > space in it at the beginning due to the fact that it is quite often > > updated, and then the free space was exhausted. So the speed difference > > might come from the difference in using free space versus creating new > > pages ? Or the same thing for the b-tree indexes. > > > > Is there any other reasonable explanation for this ? As I see this kind > > of behavior consistently, speed OK on start of inserting, and then slow > > down, and I would like to know if I can tune my DB to cope with it or > > just accept that it works like this... > > > > Cheers, > > Csaba. > > I can't think of any explanation for this off-hand. Can you re-run the > test on a table that doesn't have a bunch of free space in it to see if > that's what the issue was? So the issue was that the system had other scheduled heavy activities running I was not aware of. So when they started, the insert performance dropped... so I guess it is all clear now, at least for me... it's the typical case of the right hand doesn't know what the left hand does, and the head spends a lot of time figuring out what both were doing ;-) Cheers, Csaba. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org