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Learn PostgreSQL

You're reading from  Learn PostgreSQL

Product type Book
Published in Oct 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838985288
Pages 650 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Authors (2):
Luca Ferrari Luca Ferrari
Profile icon Luca Ferrari
Enrico Pirozzi Enrico Pirozzi
Profile icon Enrico Pirozzi
View More author details

Table of Contents (27) Chapters

Preface Section 1: Getting Started
Introduction to PostgreSQL Getting to Know Your Cluster Managing Users and Connections Section 2: Interacting with the Database
Basic Statements Advanced Statements Window Functions Server-Side Programming Triggers and Rules Partitioning Section 3: Administering the Cluster
Users, Roles, and Database Security Transactions, MVCC, WALs, and Checkpoints Extending the Database - the Extension Ecosystem Indexes and Performance Optimization Logging and Auditing Backup and Restore Configuration and Monitoring Section 4: Replication
Physical Replication Logical Replication Section 5: The PostegreSQL Ecosystem
Useful Tools and Extensions Toward PostgreSQL 13 Other Books You May Enjoy

VACUUM

In the previous sections, you have learned how PostgreSQL exploits MVCC to store different versions of the same data (tuples) that different transactions can perceive depending on their active snapshot. However, keeping different versions of the same tuples requires extra space with regard to the last active version, and this space could fill your storage sooner or later. To prevent that, and reclaim storage space, PostgreSQL provides an internal tool named vacuum, the aim of which is to analyze stored tuple versions and remove the ones that are no longer perceivable.

Remember: a tuple is not perceivable when there are no more active transactions that can reference the version, which means having the tuple version within their snapshot.

Vacuum can be an I/O-intensive operation since it must reclaim no more used disk space, and therefore can be an invasive operation. For that reason, you are not supposed to run vacuum very frequently and PostgreSQL also provides a background job...

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