On 12/9/18 5:51 AM, Andrew Dunstan wrote:

On 12/8/18 6:38 PM, Andres Freund wrote:
On 2018-12-08 15:23:19 -0800, Rob Sargent wrote:

On Dec 8, 2018, at 3:12 PM, Andres Freund <and...@anarazel.de> wrote:

On 2018-12-08 12:06:23 -0800, Jeremy Schneider wrote:
On RDS PostgreSQL, the default is 25% of your server memory. This seems
to be pretty widely accepted as a good starting point on PostgreSQL.
FWIW, I think it's widely cited, but also bad advice.  25% for a OLTP
workload on a 1TB machine with a database size above 25% is a terrible
idea.

Sorry, could you please expand “database size above 25%”?  25% of what?
Memory available to postgres (i.e. 100% of the server's memory on a
server dedicated to postgres, less if it's shared duty).



I think the best advice these days is that you need to triangulate to find the best setting for shared_buffers. It's very workload dependent, and there isn't even a semi-reliable rule of thumb.

Any advice, approaches to triangulating shared_buffers you can share would be most helpful





cheers


andrew



Reply via email to