Postgres admin team,

 

I posed this question last week.  Probably a bad week to ask questions as
many people off

For the holidays so response was light.  Thanks to Pete Eisentraut for his
feedback.

 

I'd like to pose the question again.  Our upgrade time-table is getting
close.  Any and

All feedback would be appreciated.

 

Thank you,

Mark Steben 

 

  _____  

From: Mark Steben [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, December 28, 2007 10:09 AM
To: 'pgsql-admin@postgresql.org'
Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'; 'David Parks'; 'Craig Brothers'
Subject: reconfiguring diskspace while upgrading to 8.2.5

 

Admin team,

 

We are upgrading from Postgres 7.4.5 to 8.2.5 in mid January.  We are also
adding new disks

As we go.  I am investigating using the new tablespace facility to move our
biggest and most accessed

Table to the new disk.  Here are the statistics.  We are running RAID 10

  Current database size -------------   63 GIG

  Heavy accessed table to move:

           Table -----------------------   7.4 GIG

           2 indexes -------------------   3 GIG apiece

           2 other indexes -------------   2.5 GIG apiece

 

Current database disk configuration

          TOTAL space -------------- 404 GIG

           TOTAL spindles -----------      3

           TOTAL mirrors ------------      3

 New additional disk configuration

           TOTAL  space ------------   290 GIG

           TOTAL spindles -----------       2

           TOTAL mirrors   -----------      2

 

The choices we see are:

    1. Adding the two new spindles to the other three making one huge
logical partition

        And all 350+ tables and 400+ indexes continue to reside there

    2. Keeping the two new spindles separate and dedicating the heavy access
table

         And its 4 indexes to it.

    3. Keeping the two new spindles separate and dedicating the heavy access
table

          To it, but keeping the 4 indexes on the old partition.

 

I know that maintaining almost 700 GIG of total disk space being utilized by
a 63 GIG

  Database looks like disk-space overkill but we do expect massive growth
over the 

  Next 2 - 3 years.

 

Any thoughts / comments would be appreciated.

 

Also are there tools out there that monitor disk I/O and disk speed?

 

Thanks for your time,      

 

Mark Steben

Senior Database Administrator
@utoRevenueT 
A Dominion Enterprises Company
480 Pleasant Street
Suite B200
Lee, MA 01238
413-243-4800 Home Office 
413-243-4809 Corporate Fax

msteben <blocked::mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> @autorevenue.com

Visit our new website at 
 <blocked::http://www.autorevenue.com/> www.autorevenue.com

 

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