PostgreSQL databases require
periodic maintenance known as vacuuming.
For many installations, it is sufficient to let vacuuming be
performed by the autovacuum daemon,
which is described in Section 24.1.6. You
might need to adjust the autovacuuming parameters described there
to obtain best results for your situation. Some database
administrators will want to supplement or replace the daemon's
activities with manually-managed VACUUM commands, which typically are executed
according to a schedule by cron or
Task Scheduler scripts. To set up
manually-managed vacuuming properly, it is essential to understand
the issues discussed in the next few subsections. Administrators
who rely on autovacuuming may still wish to skim this material to
help them understand and adjust autovacuuming.
PostgreSQL's VACUUM command has to process each table on a regular basis for several reasons:
Each of these reasons dictates performing VACUUM operations of varying frequency and scope,
as explained in the following subsections.
There are two variants of VACUUM:
standard VACUUM and VACUUM FULL. VACUUM
FULL can reclaim more disk space but runs much more slowly.
Also, the standard form of VACUUM can
run in parallel with production database operations. (Commands such
as SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, and
DELETE will continue to function
normally, though you will not be able to modify the definition of a
table with commands such as ALTER
TABLE while it is being vacuumed.) VACUUM FULL requires exclusive lock on the table
it is working on, and therefore cannot be done in parallel with
other use of the table. Generally, therefore, administrators should
strive to use standard VACUUM and
avoid VACUUM FULL.
VACUUM creates a substantial amount
of I/O traffic, which can cause poor performance for other active
sessions. There are configuration parameters that can be adjusted
to reduce the performance impact of background vacuuming — see
Section 19.4.4.
In PostgreSQL, an UPDATE or DELETE of a
row does not immediately remove the old version of the row. This
approach is necessary to gain the benefits of multiversion
concurrency control (MVCC, see
Chapter 13):
the row version must not be deleted while it is still potentially
visible to other transactions. But eventually, an outdated or
deleted row version is no longer of interest to any transaction.
The space it occupies must then be reclaimed for reuse by new rows,
to avoid unbounded growth of disk space requirements. This is done
by running VACUUM.
The standard form of VACUUM removes
dead row versions in tables and indexes and marks the space
available for future reuse. However, it will not return the space
to the operating system, except in the special case where one or
more pages at the end of a table become entirely free and an
exclusive table lock can be easily obtained. In contrast,
VACUUM FULL actively compacts tables
by writing a complete new version of the table file with no dead
space. This minimizes the size of the table, but can take a long
time. It also requires extra disk space for the new copy of the
table, until the operation completes.
The usual goal of routine vacuuming is to do standard
VACUUMs often enough to avoid needing
VACUUM FULL. The autovacuum daemon
attempts to work this way, and in fact will never issue
VACUUM FULL. In this approach, the
idea is not to keep tables at their minimum size, but to maintain
steady-state usage of disk space: each table occupies space
equivalent to its minimum size plus however much space gets used up
between vacuumings. Although VACUUM
FULL can be used to shrink a table back to its minimum size
and return the disk space to the operating system, there is not
much point in this if the table will just grow again in the future.
Thus, moderately-frequent standard VACUUM runs are a better approach than infrequent
VACUUM FULL runs for maintaining
heavily-updated tables.
Some administrators prefer to schedule vacuuming themselves, for
example doing all the work at night when load is low. The
difficulty with doing vacuuming according to a fixed schedule is
that if a table has an unexpected spike in update activity, it may
get bloated to the point that VACUUM
FULL is really necessary to reclaim space. Using the
autovacuum daemon alleviates this problem, since the daemon
schedules vacuuming dynamically in response to update activity. It
is unwise to disable the daemon completely unless you have an
extremely predictable workload. One possible compromise is to set
the daemon's parameters so that it will only react to unusually
heavy update activity, thus keeping things from getting out of
hand, while scheduled VACUUMs are
expected to do the bulk of the work when the load is typical.
For those not using autovacuum, a typical approach is to
schedule a database-wide VACUUM once a
day during a low-usage period, supplemented by more frequent
vacuuming of heavily-updated tables as necessary. (Some
installations with extremely high update rates vacuum their busiest
tables as often as once every few minutes.) If you have multiple
databases in a cluster, don't forget to VACUUM each one; the program vacuumdb might be helpful.
Plain VACUUM may not be
satisfactory when a table contains large numbers of dead row
versions as a result of massive update or delete activity. If you
have such a table and you need to reclaim the excess disk space it
occupies, you will need to use VACUUM
FULL, or alternatively CLUSTER or one of the table-rewriting
variants of ALTER TABLE.
These commands rewrite an entire new copy of the table and build
new indexes for it. All these options require exclusive lock. Note
that they also temporarily use extra disk space approximately equal
to the size of the table, since the old copies of the table and
indexes can't be released until the new ones are complete.
If you have a table whose entire contents are deleted on a
periodic basis, consider doing it with TRUNCATE rather than using DELETE followed by VACUUM. TRUNCATE
removes the entire content of the table immediately, without
requiring a subsequent VACUUM or
VACUUM FULL to reclaim the now-unused
disk space. The disadvantage is that strict MVCC semantics are
violated.
The PostgreSQL query planner
relies on statistical information about the contents of tables in
order to generate good plans for queries. These statistics are
gathered by the ANALYZE command,
which can be invoked by itself or as an optional step in
VACUUM. It is important to have
reasonably accurate statistics, otherwise poor choices of plans
might degrade database performance.
The autovacuum daemon, if enabled, will automatically issue
ANALYZE commands whenever the content
of a table has changed sufficiently. However, administrators might
prefer to rely on manually-scheduled ANALYZE operations, particularly if it is known
that update activity on a table will not affect the statistics of
“interesting”
columns. The daemon schedules ANALYZE
strictly as a function of the number of rows inserted or updated;
it has no knowledge of whether that will lead to meaningful
statistical changes.
As with vacuuming for space recovery, frequent updates of
statistics are more useful for heavily-updated tables than for
seldom-updated ones. But even for a heavily-updated table, there
might be no need for statistics updates if the statistical
distribution of the data is not changing much. A simple rule of
thumb is to think about how much the minimum and maximum values of
the columns in the table change. For example, a timestamp column that contains the time of row update
will have a constantly-increasing maximum value as rows are added
and updated; such a column will probably need more frequent
statistics updates than, say, a column containing URLs for pages
accessed on a website. The URL column might receive changes just as
often, but the statistical distribution of its values probably
changes relatively slowly.
It is possible to run ANALYZE on
specific tables and even just specific columns of a table, so the
flexibility exists to update some statistics more frequently than
others if your application requires it. In practice, however, it is
usually best to just analyze the entire database, because it is a
fast operation. ANALYZE uses a
statistically random sampling of the rows of a table rather than
reading every single row.
Although per-column tweaking of ANALYZE frequency might not be very productive,
you might find it worthwhile to do per-column adjustment of the
level of detail of the statistics collected by ANALYZE. Columns that are heavily used in
WHERE clauses and have highly
irregular data distributions might require a finer-grain data
histogram than other columns. See ALTER TABLE
SET STATISTICS, or change the database-wide default using
the default_statistics_target
configuration parameter.
Also, by default there is limited information available about the selectivity of functions. However, if you create an expression index that uses a function call, useful statistics will be gathered about the function, which can greatly improve query plans that use the expression index.
The autovacuum daemon does not issue ANALYZE commands for foreign tables, since it has
no means of determining how often that might be useful. If your
queries require statistics on foreign tables for proper planning,
it's a good idea to run manually-managed ANALYZE commands on those tables on a suitable
schedule.
Vacuum maintains a visibility map for each table to keep track of which pages contain only tuples that are known to be visible to all active transactions (and all future transactions, until the page is again modified). This has two purposes. First, vacuum itself can skip such pages on the next run, since there is nothing to clean up.
Second, it allows PostgreSQL to answer some queries using only the index, without reference to the underlying table. Since PostgreSQL indexes don't contain tuple visibility information, a normal index scan fetches the heap tuple for each matching index entry, to check whether it should be seen by the current transaction. An index-only scan, on the other hand, checks the visibility map first. If it's known that all tuples on the page are visible, the heap fetch can be skipped. This is most useful on large data sets where the visibility map can prevent disk accesses. The visibility map is vastly smaller than the heap, so it can easily be cached even when the heap is very large.
PostgreSQL's MVCC transaction semantics depend on being able to compare transaction ID (XID) numbers: a row version with an insertion XID greater than the current transaction's XID is “in the future” and should not be visible to the current transaction. But since transaction IDs have limited size (32 bits) a cluster that runs for a long time (more than 4 billion transactions) would suffer transaction ID wraparound: the XID counter wraps around to zero, and all of a sudden transactions that were in the past appear to be in the future — which means their output become invisible. In short, catastrophic data loss. (Actually the data is still there, but that's cold comfort if you cannot get at it.) To avoid this, it is necessary to vacuum every table in every database at least once every two billion transactions.
The reason that periodic vacuuming solves the problem is that
VACUUM will mark rows as frozen, indicating that they were
inserted by a transaction that committed sufficiently far in the
past that the effects of the inserting transaction are certain to
be visible to all current and future transactions. Normal XIDs are
compared using modulo-232 arithmetic. This means that
for every normal XID, there are two billion XIDs that are
“older” and
two billion that are “newer”; another way to say it is that the
normal XID space is circular with no endpoint. Therefore, once a
row version has been created with a particular normal XID, the row
version will appear to be “in the past” for the next two billion
transactions, no matter which normal XID we are talking about. If
the row version still exists after more than two billion
transactions, it will suddenly appear to be in the future. To
prevent this, PostgreSQL reserves
a special XID, FrozenTransactionId,
which does not follow the normal XID comparison rules and is always
considered older than every normal XID. Frozen row versions are
treated as if the inserting XID were FrozenTransactionId, so that they will appear to
be “in the
past” to all normal transactions regardless of
wraparound issues, and so such row versions will be valid until
deleted, no matter how long that is.
In PostgreSQL versions before
9.4, freezing was implemented by actually replacing a row's
insertion XID with FrozenTransactionId, which was visible in the
row's xmin system column. Newer
versions just set a flag bit, preserving the row's original
xmin for possible forensic use.
However, rows with xmin equal to
FrozenTransactionId (2) may still be
found in databases pg_upgrade'd
from pre-9.4 versions.
Also, system catalogs may contain rows with xmin equal to BootstrapTransactionId (1), indicating that they
were inserted during the first phase of initdb. Like FrozenTransactionId, this special XID is treated
as older than every normal XID.
vacuum_freeze_min_age controls how old an XID value has to be before rows bearing that XID will be frozen. Increasing this setting may avoid unnecessary work if the rows that would otherwise be frozen will soon be modified again, but decreasing this setting increases the number of transactions that can elapse before the table must be vacuumed again.
VACUUM uses the visibility
map to determine which pages of a table must be scanned.
Normally, it will skip pages that don't have any dead row versions
even if those pages might still have row versions with old XID
values. Therefore, normal VACUUMs
won't always freeze every old row version in the table.
Periodically, VACUUM will perform an
aggressive vacuum, skipping only those
pages which contain neither dead rows nor any unfrozen XID or MXID
values. vacuum_freeze_table_age
controls when VACUUM does that:
all-visible but not all-frozen pages are scanned if the number of
transactions that have passed since the last such scan is greater
than vacuum_freeze_table_age minus
vacuum_freeze_min_age. Setting
vacuum_freeze_table_age to 0 forces
VACUUM to use this more aggressive
strategy for all scans.
The maximum time that a table can go unvacuumed is two billion
transactions minus the vacuum_freeze_min_age value at the time of the
last aggressive vacuum. If it were to go unvacuumed for longer than
that, data loss could result. To ensure that this does not happen,
autovacuum is invoked on any table that might contain unfrozen rows
with XIDs older than the age specified by the configuration
parameter autovacuum_freeze_max_age.
(This will happen even if autovacuum is disabled.)
This implies that if a table is not otherwise vacuumed,
autovacuum will be invoked on it approximately once every
autovacuum_freeze_max_age minus
vacuum_freeze_min_age transactions.
For tables that are regularly vacuumed for space reclamation
purposes, this is of little importance. However, for static tables
(including tables that receive inserts, but no updates or deletes),
there is no need to vacuum for space reclamation, so it can be
useful to try to maximize the interval between forced autovacuums
on very large static tables. Obviously one can do this either by
increasing autovacuum_freeze_max_age
or decreasing vacuum_freeze_min_age.
The effective maximum for vacuum_freeze_table_age is 0.95 * autovacuum_freeze_max_age; a setting higher than
that will be capped to the maximum. A value higher than
autovacuum_freeze_max_age wouldn't
make sense because an anti-wraparound autovacuum would be triggered
at that point anyway, and the 0.95 multiplier leaves some breathing
room to run a manual VACUUM before
that happens. As a rule of thumb, vacuum_freeze_table_age should be set to a value
somewhat below autovacuum_freeze_max_age, leaving enough gap so
that a regularly scheduled VACUUM or
an autovacuum triggered by normal delete and update activity is run
in that window. Setting it too close could lead to anti-wraparound
autovacuums, even though the table was recently vacuumed to reclaim
space, whereas lower values lead to more frequent aggressive
vacuuming.
The sole disadvantage of increasing autovacuum_freeze_max_age (and vacuum_freeze_table_age along with it) is that the
pg_xact and pg_commit_ts subdirectories of the database
cluster will take more space, because it must store the commit
status and (if track_commit_timestamp
is enabled) timestamp of all transactions back to the autovacuum_freeze_max_age horizon. The commit
status uses two bits per transaction, so if autovacuum_freeze_max_age is set to its maximum
allowed value of two billion, pg_xact
can be expected to grow to about half a gigabyte and pg_commit_ts to about 20GB. If this is trivial
compared to your total database size, setting autovacuum_freeze_max_age to its maximum allowed
value is recommended. Otherwise, set it depending on what you are
willing to allow for pg_xact and
pg_commit_ts storage. (The default,
200 million transactions, translates to about 50MB of pg_xact storage and about 2GB of pg_commit_ts storage.)
One disadvantage of decreasing vacuum_freeze_min_age is that it might cause
VACUUM to do useless work: freezing a
row version is a waste of time if the row is modified soon
thereafter (causing it to acquire a new XID). So the setting should
be large enough that rows are not frozen until they are unlikely to
change any more.
To track the age of the oldest unfrozen XIDs in a database,
VACUUM stores XID statistics in the
system tables pg_class and
pg_database. In particular, the
relfrozenxid column of a table's
pg_class row contains the freeze
cutoff XID that was used by the last aggressive VACUUM for that table. All rows inserted by
transactions with XIDs older than this cutoff XID are guaranteed to
have been frozen. Similarly, the datfrozenxid column of a database's
pg_database row is a lower bound on
the unfrozen XIDs appearing in that database — it is just the
minimum of the per-table relfrozenxid values within the database. A
convenient way to examine this information is to execute queries
such as:
SELECT c.oid::regclass as table_name,
greatest(age(c.relfrozenxid),age(t.relfrozenxid)) as age
FROM pg_class c
LEFT JOIN pg_class t ON c.reltoastrelid = t.oid
WHERE c.relkind IN ('r', 'm');
SELECT datname, age(datfrozenxid) FROM pg_database;
The age column measures the number
of transactions from the cutoff XID to the current transaction's
XID.
VACUUM normally only scans pages
that have been modified since the last vacuum, but relfrozenxid can only be advanced when every
page of the table that might contain unfrozen XIDs is scanned. This
happens when relfrozenxid is more
than vacuum_freeze_table_age
transactions old, when VACUUM's
FREEZE option is used, or when all
pages that are not already all-frozen happen to require vacuuming
to remove dead row versions. When VACUUM scans every page in the table that is not
already all-frozen, it should set age(relfrozenxid) to a value just a little more
than the vacuum_freeze_min_age setting
that was used (more by the number of transactions started since the
VACUUM started). If no relfrozenxid-advancing VACUUM is issued on the table until autovacuum_freeze_max_age is reached, an
autovacuum will soon be forced for the table.
If for some reason autovacuum fails to clear old XIDs from a table, the system will begin to emit warning messages like this when the database's oldest XIDs reach ten million transactions from the wraparound point:
WARNING: database "mydb" must be vacuumed within 177009986 transactions HINT: To avoid a database shutdown, execute a database-wide VACUUM in "mydb".
(A manual VACUUM should fix the
problem, as suggested by the hint; but note that the VACUUM must be performed by a superuser, else it
will fail to process system catalogs and thus not be able to
advance the database's datfrozenxid.) If these warnings are ignored,
the system will shut down and refuse to start any new transactions
once there are fewer than 1 million transactions left until
wraparound:
ERROR: database is not accepting commands to avoid wraparound data loss in database "mydb" HINT: Stop the postmaster and vacuum that database in single-user mode.
The 1-million-transaction safety margin exists to let the
administrator recover without data loss, by manually executing the
required VACUUM commands. However,
since the system will not execute commands once it has gone into
the safety shutdown mode, the only way to do this is to stop the
server and start the server in single-user mode to execute
VACUUM. The shutdown mode is not
enforced in single-user mode. See the postgres reference page for details
about using single-user mode.
Multixact IDs are used to support row
locking by multiple transactions. Since there is only limited space
in a tuple header to store lock information, that information is
encoded as a “multiple
transaction ID”, or multixact ID for short, whenever
there is more than one transaction concurrently locking a row.
Information about which transaction IDs are included in any
particular multixact ID is stored separately in the pg_multixact subdirectory, and only the multixact
ID appears in the xmax field in
the tuple header. Like transaction IDs, multixact IDs are
implemented as a 32-bit counter and corresponding storage, all of
which requires careful aging management, storage cleanup, and
wraparound handling. There is a separate storage area which holds
the list of members in each multixact, which also uses a 32-bit
counter and which must also be managed.
Whenever VACUUM scans any part of a
table, it will replace any multixact ID it encounters which is
older than vacuum_multixact_freeze_min_age
by a different value, which can be the zero value, a single
transaction ID, or a newer multixact ID. For each table,
pg_class.relminmxid stores the oldest possible
multixact ID still appearing in any tuple of that table. If this
value is older than vacuum_multixact_freeze_table_age,
an aggressive vacuum is forced. As discussed in the previous
section, an aggressive vacuum means that only those pages which are
known to be all-frozen will be skipped. mxid_age() can be used on pg_class.relminmxid to find its age.
Aggressive VACUUM scans, regardless
of what causes them, enable advancing the value for that table.
Eventually, as all tables in all databases are scanned and their
oldest multixact values are advanced, on-disk storage for older
multixacts can be removed.
As a safety device, an aggressive vacuum scan will occur for any table whose multixact-age is greater than autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age. Aggressive vacuum scans will also occur progressively for all tables, starting with those that have the oldest multixact-age, if the amount of used member storage space exceeds the amount 50% of the addressable storage space. Both of these kinds of aggressive scans will occur even if autovacuum is nominally disabled.
PostgreSQL has an optional but
highly recommended feature called autovacuum, whose purpose is to automate the
execution of VACUUM and ANALYZE commands. When enabled, autovacuum checks
for tables that have had a large number of inserted, updated or
deleted tuples. These checks use the statistics collection
facility; therefore, autovacuum cannot be used unless track_counts
is set to true. In the default
configuration, autovacuuming is enabled and the related
configuration parameters are appropriately set.
The “autovacuum
daemon” actually consists of multiple processes.
There is a persistent daemon process, called the autovacuum launcher, which is in charge of
starting autovacuum worker processes for
all databases. The launcher will distribute the work across time,
attempting to start one worker within each database every autovacuum_naptime
seconds. (Therefore, if the installation has N databases, a new worker will be
launched every autovacuum_naptime/N seconds.) A maximum of autovacuum_max_workers
worker processes are allowed to run at the same time. If there are
more than autovacuum_max_workers
databases to be processed, the next database will be processed as
soon as the first worker finishes. Each worker process will check
each table within its database and execute VACUUM and/or ANALYZE
as needed. log_autovacuum_min_duration
can be set to monitor autovacuum workers' activity.
If several large tables all become eligible for vacuuming in a short amount of time, all autovacuum workers might become occupied with vacuuming those tables for a long period. This would result in other tables and databases not being vacuumed until a worker becomes available. There is no limit on how many workers might be in a single database, but workers do try to avoid repeating work that has already been done by other workers. Note that the number of running workers does not count towards max_connections or superuser_reserved_connections limits.
Tables whose relfrozenxid value
is more than autovacuum_freeze_max_age
transactions old are always vacuumed (this also applies to those
tables whose freeze max age has been modified via storage
parameters; see below). Otherwise, if the number of tuples
obsoleted since the last VACUUM
exceeds the “vacuum
threshold”, the table is vacuumed. The vacuum
threshold is defined as:
vacuum threshold = vacuum base threshold + vacuum scale factor * number of tuples
where the vacuum base threshold is autovacuum_vacuum_threshold,
the vacuum scale factor is
autovacuum_vacuum_scale_factor, and the number of tuples is
pg_class.reltuples. The number of obsolete tuples is
obtained from the statistics collector; it is a semi-accurate count
updated by each UPDATE and
DELETE operation. (It is only
semi-accurate because some information might be lost under heavy
load.) If the relfrozenxid value
of the table is more than vacuum_freeze_table_age transactions old, an
aggressive vacuum is performed to freeze old tuples and advance
relfrozenxid; otherwise, only
pages that have been modified since the last vacuum are
scanned.
For analyze, a similar condition is used: the threshold, defined as:
analyze threshold = analyze base threshold + analyze scale factor * number of tuples
is compared to the total number of tuples inserted, updated, or
deleted since the last ANALYZE.
Temporary tables cannot be accessed by autovacuum. Therefore, appropriate vacuum and analyze operations should be performed via session SQL commands.
The default thresholds and scale factors are taken from
postgresql.conf, but it is possible
to override them (and many other autovacuum control parameters) on
a per-table basis; see Storage Parameters for more information.
If a setting has been changed via a table's storage parameters,
that value is used when processing that table; otherwise the global
settings are used. See Section 19.10 for more
details on the global settings.
When multiple workers are running, the autovacuum cost delay
parameters (see Section 19.4.4) are
“balanced”
among all the running workers, so that the total I/O impact on the
system is the same regardless of the number of workers actually
running. However, any workers processing tables whose per-table
autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay or
autovacuum_vacuum_cost_limit storage
parameters have been set are not considered in the balancing
algorithm.
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