Re: pg_upgrade and statistics

Kevin Grittner <kevin.grittner@wicourts.gov>

From: "Kevin Grittner" <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov>
To: "Robert Haas" <robertmhaas@gmail.com>, "Bruce Momjian" <bruce@momjian.us>
Cc: "Peter Eisentraut" <peter_e@gmx.net>, "Daniel Farina" <daniel@heroku.com>,"Greg Stark" <stark@mit.edu>, "pgsql-hackers" <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>, "Tom Lane" <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Date: 2012-03-13T22:40:53Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote:
 
> I'm not sure why we're so glibly rejecting Dan's original
> proposal.  Sure, adjusting pg_upgrade when we whack around
> pg_statistic is work, but who ever said that a workable in-place
> upgrade facility would be maintenance-free?  We're operating under
> a number of restrictions imposed by the need to be pg_upgrade-
> compatible, and this doesn't strike me as a particularly severe
> one by comparison -- we can always arrange to NOT migrate
> statistics between incompatible versions; that doesn't mean that
> we shouldn't migrate them when they ARE compatible.  Also, unlike
> the alternatives thus far proposed, Dan's idea actually fixes the
> problem.
 
In case it got lost with my various timings, I agree with Robert on
all of the above.  The three-minute downtime for pg_upgrade to
upgrade our multi-TB databases is *very* impressive; but I think we
lose bragging rights if we follow that up with -- oh, but the
database isn't really fully *usable* until you run a one-hour
analyze afterward.
 
-Kevin