root@rpopdb01e ~ # fgrep data /etc/fstab UUID=f815fd3f-e4e4-43a6-a6a1-bce1203db3e0 /var/lib/pgsql/9.3/data ext4 noatime,nodiratime 0 1 root@rpopdb01e ~ #
According to iostat the disks are not the bottleneck. 12.02.2014, в 21:30, Ilya Kosmodemiansky <hydrobi...@gmail.com> написал(а): > Hi Vladimir, > > Just in case: how is your ext4 mount? > > Best regards, > Ilya > > On Feb 12, 2014, at 17:59, Бородин Владимир <r...@simply.name> wrote: > >> Hi all. >> >> Today I have started getting errors like below in logs (seems that I have >> not changed anything for last week). When it happens the db gets lots of >> connections in state active, eats 100% cpu and clients get errors (due to >> timeout). >> >> 2014-02-12 15:44:24.562 >> MSK,"rpop","rpopdb_p6",30061,"localhost:58350",52fb5e53.756d,1,"SELECT >> waiting",2014-02-12 15:43:15 MSK,143/264877,1002850566,LOG,00000,"process >> 30061 still waiting for ExclusiveLock on extension of relation 26118 of >> database 24590 after 1000.082 ms",,,,,"SQL statement ""insert into >> rpop.rpop_imap_uidls (folder_id, uidl) values (i_folder_id, i_uidl)"" >> >> I have read several topics [1, 2, 3, 4] with similar problems but haven't >> find a good solution. Below is some more diagnostics. >> >> I am running PostgreSQL 9.3.2 installed from RPM packages on RHEL 6.4. Host >> is running with the following CPU (32 cores) and memory: >> >> root@rpopdb01e ~ # fgrep -m1 'model name' /proc/cpuinfo >> model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2660 0 @ 2.20GHz >> root@rpopdb01e ~ # free -m >> total used free shared buffers cached >> Mem: 129028 123558 5469 0 135 119504 >> -/+ buffers/cache: 3918 125110 >> Swap: 16378 0 16378 >> root@rpopdb01e ~ # >> >> PGDATA lives on RAID6 array of 8 ssd-disks with ext4, iostat and atop say >> the disks are really free. Right now PGDATA takes only 95G. >> The settings changed in postgresql.conf are here [5]. >> >> When it happens the last query from here [6] shows that almost all queries >> are waiting for ExclusiveLock, but they do a simple insert. >> >> (extend,26647,26825,,,,,,,) | 5459 | ExclusiveLock | 1 | >> (extend,26647,26825,,,,,,,) | 8053 | ExclusiveLock | 5459,8053 >> (extend,26647,26828,,,,,,,) | 5567 | ExclusiveLock | 1 | >> (extend,26647,26828,,,,,,,) | 5490 | ExclusiveLock | 5567,5490 >> (extend,24584,25626,,,,,,,) | 5611 | ExclusiveLock | 1 | >> (extend,24584,25626,,,,,,,) | 3963 | ExclusiveLock | 5611,3963 >> >> I have several databases running on one host with one postmaster process and >> ExclusiveLock is being waited by many oids. I suppose the only common thing >> for all of them is that they are bigger than others and they almost do not >> get updates and deletes (only inserts and reads). Some more info about one >> of such tables is here [7]. >> >> I have tried to look at the source code (src/backend/access/heap/hio.c) to >> understand when the exclusive lock can be taken, but I could only read >> comments :) I have also examined FSM for this tables and their indexes and >> found that for most of them there are free pages but there are, for example, >> such cases: >> >> rpopdb_p0=# select count(*) from pg_freespace('rpop.rpop_uidl') where avail >> != 0; >> count >> -------- >> 115953 >> (1 row) >> >> rpopdb_p0=# select count(*) from pg_freespace('rpop.pk_rpop_uidl') where >> avail != 0; >> count >> ------- >> 0 >> (1 row) >> >> rpopdb_p0=# \dS+ rpop.rpop_uidl >> Table "rpop.rpop_uidl" >> Column | Type | Modifiers | Storage | Stats target | >> Description >> --------+------------------------+-----------+----------+--------------+------------- >> popid | bigint | not null | plain | | >> uidl | character varying(200) | not null | extended | | >> Indexes: >> "pk_rpop_uidl" PRIMARY KEY, btree (popid, uidl) >> Has OIDs: no >> >> rpopdb_p0=# >> >> >> My questions are: >> 1. Do we consume 100% cpu (in system) trying to get page from FSM? Or does >> it happen during exclusive lock acquiring? How can I dig it? >> 2. How much space do we extend to the relation when we get exclusive lock on >> it? >> 3. Why extended page is not visible for other backends? >> 4. Is there any possibility of situation where backend A got exclusive lock >> on some relation to extend it. Then OS CPU scheduler made a context switch >> to backend B while backend B is waiting for exclusive lock on the same >> relation. And so on for many backends. >> 5. (and the main question) what can I do to get rid of such situations? It >> is a production cluster and I do not have any ideas what to do with this >> situation :( Any help would be really appropriate. >> >> [1] >> http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/8bca3aa10906011613l8ac2423h8153bbd2513dc...@mail.gmail.com >> [2] >> http://pgsql.performance.narkive.com/IrkPbl3f/postgresql-9-2-3-performance-problem-caused-exclusive-locks >> [3] http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/50a2c93e.9070...@dalibo.com >> [4] >> http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/cal_0b1sypyeoynkynv95nnv2d+4jxtug3hkkf6fahfw7gvg...@mail.gmail.com >> [5] http://pastebin.com/raw.php?i=Bd40Vn6h >> [6] http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Lock_dependency_information >> [7 http://pastebin.com/raw.php?i=eGrtG524] >> >> -- >> Vladimir >> >> >> >> -- Vladimir