From: | Scott Marlowe <scott(dot)marlowe(at)gmail(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | Vladimir Rusinov <vladimir(at)greenmice(dot)info> |
Cc: | Lewis Kapell <lkapell(at)setonhome(dot)org>, pgsql-admin(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: fighting '<IDLE> in transaction' |
Date: | 2009-11-05 17:53:59 |
Message-ID: | dcc563d10911050953l243a4f6dwd0cab5f046bd8ab0@mail.gmail.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-admin |
On Thu, Nov 5, 2009 at 7:16 AM, Vladimir Rusinov
<vladimir(at)greenmice(dot)info> wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 5:54 PM, Lewis Kapell <lkapell(at)setonhome(dot)org> wrote:
>>
>> Please see these earlier threads:
>>
>> Is IDLE session really idle?
>> http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-admin/2009-06/msg00096.php
>>
>> Idle connections
>> http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-admin/2009-10/msg00017.php
>
> Thanks - that was useful reading, but not related to my issue. There are not
> a lot of IDLE sessions: connection pools are configured accurate. There are
> problems with 'IDLE in transaction' sessions, which I believe may cause
> strong lock problems.
The real issue with idle in transaction isn't locking so much. A
simple idle in transaction that just ran a select * from table limit
1; will have made it so that vacuum cannot reclaim space that it
normally could until that transaction is committed or rolled back. So
it's much worse than simple locking of a few records, it's causing
your data store to bloat with all the otherwise reclaimable space
since that transaction began. Let it run for a day or a week and a
busy database will be expanding until it's slow and possibly running
out of space.
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