On Thu, Jan 12, 2023 at 02:45:41PM +0530, Vigneshk Kvignesh wrote:
>    Hi,
>     
>          I'm migrating  our existing PG instances from PG11.4  to PG14.3. I
>    have around 5 Million Tables in a single database. When migrating using
>    pg_upgrade, its taking 3 hours for the process to complete. I'm not sure
>    if its the intended behaviour or we're missing something here.

 Yes. In fact, you have a good hardware and I would expect longer time
on average.

>         Most of the tables (90%) in 5 Million are foreign tables. On analysis
>    found that most of the time is spent in pg_dump (~2.3 hours). In pg_dump
>    getTableAttrs(), dumpTable() functions take the most time, approx 1 hour
>    each since we're processing table by table. Also, there are no columns
>    with default values, which if present might take some time. We're using
>    PG14's pg_upgrade binary for the process.
>        Since we have all these tables in one database, parallelism doesn't
>    have any effect here. Can we make binary upgrade for a single database run
>    in parallel ?
>         Kindly advise us if we have missed anything here and possible
>    solutions for this problem.

 I  don't  see any problem. Three-hour downtime every three years
for such setup... You are lucky you have only that.

 But you could try some logical replication  to  the  new  server
version  for upgrading, if you really want to bother.  (Well, pg-
logical is my preferred on that scale, but the three general  op-
tions are: internal logical replication, pglogical, slony).



>    So we're not sure on what we missed here.
>    Have added more info on the process below.
>    No. of Tables: 5 Million
>    Time Taken: 3 Hours
>    Command Used: $PG14_UPGRADE -Uroot -b $PG11_DIR/bin -B $PG14_DIR/bin -d
>    $PG11_DIR/data -D $PG14_DIR/data -k -r -j32
>    Version: PG11.4 to PG14.3
>    Environment: CentOS machine (32 cores(Intel), 128GB RAM)
> 
>    Thanks and Regards,
>    Vignesh K.


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