Bill Thoen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I'm new to PostgreSQL and I ran into problem I don't want to repeat. I have
> a database with a little more than 18 million records that takes up about
> 3GB. I need to check to see if there are duplicate records, so I tried a
> command like this:
> 
> SELECT count(*) AS count, fld1, fld2, fld3, fld4 FROM MyTable 
>   GROUP BY fld1, fld2, fld3, fld4
>   ORDER BY 1 DESC;
> 
> I knew this would take some time, but what I didn't expect was that about
> an hour into the select, my mouse and keyboard locked up and also I
> couldn't log in from another computer via SSH. This is a Linux machine
> running Fedora Core 6 and PostgresQL is 8.1.4. There's about 50GB free on
> the disc too.
> 
> I finally had to shut the power off and reboot to regain control of my
> computer (that wasn't good idea, either, but eventually I got everything
> working again.)
> 
> Is this normal behavior by PG with large databases?

No.  Something is wrong.

> Did I misconfigure
> something? Does anyone know what might be wrong?

Possibly, but I would be more inclined to guess that your hardware is
faulty and you encountered a RAM error, or the CPU overheated or
something along those lines.  I'm not familiar with Linux systems
hard-locking like that unless there is a hardware issue.

-- 
Bill Moran
http://www.potentialtech.com

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