Re: another autovacuum scheduling thread

Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com>

From: Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com>
To: Jeremy Schneider <schneider@ardentperf.com>
Cc: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>, Robert Treat <rob@xzilla.net>, David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>, Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>, pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Date: 2025-11-13T00:32:12Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers

Commits

Same data as JSON: GET /api/v1/messages/:b64id/commits the thread's linked commits as JSON, with link sources. API reference →
  1. Add rudimentary table prioritization to autovacuum.

  2. Trigger more frequent autovacuums with relallfrozen

  3. Harden nbtree page deletion.

  4. Check for interrupts inside the nbtree page deletion code.

>
> > On Nov 12, 2025, at 5:10 PM, Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > 
> >>
> >> I do think re-prioritization is worth considering, but IMHO we should
> leave
> >> it out of phase 1.  I think it's pretty easy to reason about one round
> of
> >> prioritization being okay.  The order is completely arbitrary today, so
> how
> >> could ordering by vacuum-related criteria make things any worse?
> >
> > While it’s true that the current table order is arbitrary, that
> arbitrariness
> > naturally helps distribute vacuum work across tables of various sizes
> > at a given time
> >
> > The proposal now is by design forcing all the top bloated table, that
> > will require more I/O to vacuum to be vacuumed at the same time,
> > by all workers. Users may observe this after they upgrade and wonder
> > why their I/O profile changed and perhaps slowed others non-vacuum
> > related processing down. They also don't have a knob to go back to
> > the previous behavior.
> >
> > Of course, this behavior can and will happen now, but with this
> > prioritization, we are forcing it.
> >
> > Is this a concern?
>
> It’s still possible to tune the cost delay, the number of autovacuum
> workers, etc - if someone needs to manage too much autovacuum I/O
> concurrency and dialing it back down a little bit. I think that’s sufficient
>

Yes, the need to tune a/v for I/O( lower cost limit, higher cost delay
) will likely be
greater with this change.

--
Sami