Hi,

 I have about 15 different PC's running RedHat 7.3 Linux, each running the 
same database backed application (I use  Postgresql 7.2.1 for the database) 
on each machine. 

The application essentially stores files on each of the PC's and the database 
on each machine stores information relevant to the files that are stored on 
that machine. 

The files themselves are stored on a RAID on each PC, around 300 GB in size. 
As each file is about .5MB in size, thus about 600,000 files are stored and 
managed by the Postgresql database on each machine. I note that the database 
is about 1GB in size on each of the machines.

I am constantly receiving new files, and as the PC's fill with files, I simply 
add additonal PC to my farm of PC's. 

These databases therefore never have any data deleted  from the databases. I 
just add files, and corresponding database entries each day, until I fill the 
machine with files. I run vacuum analyze on these databases about 3 times a 
day. 

I also keep one machine slightly different than the others. 

On this machine, as a backup to the other machines, instead of just storing  
files without deleting, I use a scheme that stores new files as they come in 
but also deletes the oldest files from the RAID and also deletes the 
corresponding entries describing those entries from the database. I use this 
machine as an element of redundancy to recent files on the other machines.

On this system, I keep the RAID about 75% full of files, and thus I imagine 
that the Postgresql database should be about .75 of a GB in size. However, it 
isnt! I find that it keeps growing as time goes on. Its now about 3.9GB in 
size! 

In fact, I just had to move the database to another partition on my system 
disk,  because it filled the var partition!

But I run vaccuum analyze at the same frequency as on the PC's? How is it that 
deleting and saving and vacuum analyze doesnt keep it at a normal svelte <1Gb 
in size?

What should  I do to shrink it back down to its normal svelte shape?

Thanks,
Mitchell



This way I have redundant copies of the most recent files that were stored on 
the other machines.



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