On Sun, Aug 9, 2009 at 4:06 AM, Kobus Wolvaardt<kobuswolf@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi, > > We have software deployed on our network that need postgres, we have server > that hosts the server and all worked fine until we crossed about 200 users. > The application is written so that it makes a connection right at the start > and keeps it alive for the duration of the app. The app is written in > Delphi. The postgres server runs on a windows 2008 server with quad core cpu > and 4 GB of ram. Is this an app you can fix yourself, or are you stuck with this mis-step in design? > The problem after +-200 connections is that the server runs out of memory, > but most of these connections are idle... it only gets used every 20 minutes > to capture a transaction. > > It looks like every idle connection uses about 10MB of ram which sees high, > but I cannot find a config option to limit it. > > I tried pgbouncer to do connection pooling, but for each connection to > pgbouncer one connection is made to the server which results in exactly the > same amount of connection. If I run it in transaction pooling mode it works > for simple queries, but something goes lost says the programmer (views that > were setup or something). Are each of these connections quite different from each other or something? I'm not that familiar with pgbouncer so I don't know if this behaviour is normal. Can you get by with pgpool for this? Does it work any better? > Any help or pointers would be nice, either on how to make usage less, or on > how to get pooling to work. > > P.S. We are growing the users by another 20% soon and the will result in > massive issues. I don't mind slower operation for now, I just need to keep > it working. If another pooling solution won't fix this, then you need more memory and a bigger server. pg on windows is 32 bit so you might have some problems running it well on a larger windows machine, if that's the case, then it would likely help if you could run this on 64 bit linux with 8+Gigs of ram. This solution would allow you to grow to several hundred more connections before you'd have issues. Also, performance might be better on linux with this many connections, but I have not empirical evidence to support that belief. -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general