On Fri, Jun 11, 2010 at 10:50:20AM -0400, dx k9 wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
>  
> 
> I'm running a the check_postgres.pl --action=bloat on a database and finding 
> that there is wasted space.
> 
>  
> 
> I'm using 95% for the crtical %.  If I use 110% I get the same things, but 
> 115% shows everything is OK.
> 
>  
> 
> check_postgres_bloat -H host -p port -db thing -t thing1 -c 95%
> 
> check_postgres.pl version 2.14.3
> 
> postgres version 8.3.9
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
> POSTGRES_BLOAT CRITICAL: service=thing1 (db thing) table public.thing1 
> rows:25537152 pages:212311 shouldbe:187545 (1.1X) wasted size:202883072 (193 
> MB) * (db thing) table public.thing2 rows:10109173 pages:101832 
> shouldbe:94016 (1.1X) wasted size:64028672 (61 MB) * (db thing) table thing3 
> rows:1184946 pages:28701 shouldbe:21434 (1.3X) wasted size:59531264 (56 MB) * 
>  
>  
> I have run a reindexdb on the table, full vacuum (fze), still I can't get the 
> wasted size to go down on these, so I continue to get critical alerts that my 
> tables are bloated.
>  
> check_postgres checks for both index and table bloat.  It looks like my 
> indexes are ok, this is just picking up on table bloat.  I'm not sure what I 
> can do to reclaim the wasted space other than vacuum full & analyze.  Maybe a 
> pgdump will do it.
>  
> Thanks for any insight,
> ~DjK
>  
Because of the way PostgreSQL performs updates, your database will
perform better with a little bit of extra space over the amount
needed for your data. Unless you have a read-only database, just
use normal vacuum via autovacuum and forget about vacuum full and
trying to get "wasted" space to zero.

Regards,
Ken

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