Moving to hackers... On Wed, Jan 19, 2005 at 11:57:12PM -0500, Greg Stark wrote: > "Jim C. Nasby" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > I recall this being discussed before, but I couldn't manage to find it > > in the archives. > > > > Is there any way to see how many rows a running transaction has written? > > vacuum analyze verbose only reports visible rows. > > Not AFAIK. In the past I've done ls -l and then divided by the average row > size. But that required some guesswork and depended on the fact that I was > building the table from scratch.
Unfortunately in this case I'm not. And I wish I had some way to see what was going on, because I let this process run for 2 days, then canceled and restarted it and it ran in 5 minutes. It was consuming CPU the whole time, too; I wish I knew what the hell it was doing. > I think there's a tool to dump the raw table data which might be handy if you > know the table didn't have a lot of dead tuples in it. > > It would be *really* handy to have a working dirty read isolation level that > allowed other sessions to read uncommitted data. I can see arguments against this. I'd be happy just having a means to see how many new (not-yet-visible) tuples there were. Or better yet, how many tuples had been modified by a specific transaction (since it could both be inserting and deleting). Can one or the other options be added as a TODO? -- Jim C. Nasby, Database Consultant [EMAIL PROTECTED] Give your computer some brain candy! www.distributed.net Team #1828 Windows: "Where do you want to go today?" Linux: "Where do you want to go tomorrow?" FreeBSD: "Are you guys coming, or what?" ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly