Re: BUG #18724: High data disk utilization during log writing
Иван Ситников <sit7602@gmail.com>
From: Иван Ситников <sit7602@gmail.com>
To: Christophe Pettus <xof@thebuild.com>
Cc: PostgreSQL Bug List <pgsql-bugs@lists.postgresql.org>
Date: 2024-11-26T10:33:57Z
Lists: pgsql-bugs
Thank you for your reply. I think I'm close to solving the mystery. As a result of the research, I found that in addition to recording logs, there is also a record in the pgss_query_texts.stat file, which is located in the data directory. And at the moment, this is what I consider to be the reason for the high utilization of the data disk. But this file is not used at all if I unload pg_stat_statements module from shared_preload_libraries пн, 25 нояб. 2024 г. в 19:47, Christophe Pettus <xof@thebuild.com>: > > > > On Nov 25, 2024, at 04:26, PG Bug reporting form <noreply@postgresql.org> > wrote: > > The lsof utility did not help in investigating this problem, as did > > restarting the server > > Setting log_min_duration_statement = -1 shows a significant decrease in > the > > load on the data disk > > So I can't assume why data disk (/dev/vdb1 /data) utilized up to 60-80% > > while statements are logged to separate block device (/dev/vdc1 > > /var/log/postgresql) and need some help to get off the ground > > The question seems to answer itself here: You are logging every statement > to the text logs, and it is very likely that the lines in the text log are > larger than the actual data for that statement being written to the data > disk. It can be very expensive to log every statement, especially when you > have a significant query load (which you do here).