30.4. WAL Configuration
There are several WAL -related configuration parameters that affect database performance. This section explains their use. Consult Chapter 19 for general information about setting server configuration parameters.
Checkpoints are points in the sequence of transactions at which it is guaranteed that the heap and index data files have been updated with all information written before that checkpoint. At checkpoint time, all dirty data pages are flushed to disk and a special checkpoint record is written to the log file. (The change records were previously flushed to the WAL files.) In the event of a crash, the crash recovery procedure looks at the latest checkpoint record to determine the point in the log (known as the redo record) from which it should start the REDO operation. Any changes made to data files before that point are guaranteed to be already on disk. Hence, after a checkpoint, log segments preceding the one containing the redo record are no longer needed and can be recycled or removed. (When WAL archiving is being done, the log segments must be archived before being recycled or removed.)
The checkpoint requirement of flushing all dirty data pages to disk can cause a significant I/O load. For this reason, checkpoint activity is throttled so that I/O begins at checkpoint start and completes before the next checkpoint is due to start; this minimizes performance degradation during checkpoints.
  The server's checkpointer process automatically performs
   a checkpoint every so often.  A checkpoint is begun every
  
   checkpoint_timeout
  
  seconds, or if
  
   max_wal_size
  
  is about to be exceeded,
   whichever comes first.
   The default settings are 5 minutes and 1 GB, respectively.
   If no WAL has been written since the previous checkpoint, new checkpoints
   will be skipped even if
  
   checkpoint_timeout
  
  has passed.
   (If WAL archiving is being used and you want to put a lower limit on how
   often files are archived in order to bound potential data loss, you should
   adjust the
  
   archive_timeout
  
  parameter rather than the
   checkpoint parameters.)
   It is also possible to force a checkpoint by using the SQL
   command
  
   CHECKPOINT
  
  .
 
  Reducing
  
   checkpoint_timeout
  
  and/or
  
   max_wal_size
  
  causes checkpoints to occur
   more often. This allows faster after-crash recovery, since less work
   will need to be redone. However, one must balance this against the
   increased cost of flushing dirty data pages more often. If
  
   full_page_writes
  
  is set (as is the default), there is
   another factor to consider. To ensure data page consistency,
   the first modification of a data page after each checkpoint results in
   logging the entire page content. In that case,
   a smaller checkpoint interval increases the volume of output to the WAL log,
   partially negating the goal of using a smaller interval,
   and in any case causing more disk I/O.
 
  Checkpoints are fairly expensive, first because they require writing
   out all currently dirty buffers, and second because they result in
   extra subsequent WAL traffic as discussed above.  It is therefore
   wise to set the checkpointing parameters high enough so that checkpoints
   don't happen too often.  As a simple sanity check on your checkpointing
   parameters, you can set the
  
   checkpoint_warning
  
  parameter.  If checkpoints happen closer together than
  
   checkpoint_warning
  
  seconds,
   a message will be output to the server log recommending increasing
  
   max_wal_size
  
  .  Occasional appearance of such
   a message is not cause for alarm, but if it appears often then the
   checkpoint control parameters should be increased. Bulk operations such
   as large
  
   COPY
  
  transfers might cause a number of such warnings
   to appear if you have not set
  
   max_wal_size
  
  high
   enough.
 
  To avoid flooding the I/O system with a burst of page writes,
   writing dirty buffers during a checkpoint is spread over a period of time.
   That period is controlled by
  
   checkpoint_completion_target
  
  , which is
   given as a fraction of the checkpoint interval.
   The I/O rate is adjusted so that the checkpoint finishes when the
   given fraction of
  
   checkpoint_timeout
  
  seconds have elapsed, or before
  
   max_wal_size
  
  is exceeded, whichever is sooner.
   With the default value of 0.5,
  
   PostgreSQL
  
  can be expected to complete each checkpoint
   in about half the time before the next checkpoint starts.  On a system
   that's very close to maximum I/O throughput during normal operation,
   you might want to increase
  
   checkpoint_completion_target
  
  to reduce the I/O load from checkpoints.  The disadvantage of this is that
   prolonging checkpoints affects recovery time, because more WAL segments
   will need to be kept around for possible use in recovery.  Although
  
   checkpoint_completion_target
  
  can be set as high as 1.0,
   it is best to keep it less than that (perhaps 0.9 at most) since
   checkpoints include some other activities besides writing dirty buffers.
   A setting of 1.0 is quite likely to result in checkpoints not being
   completed on time, which would result in performance loss due to
   unexpected variation in the number of WAL segments needed.
 
  On Linux and POSIX platforms
  
   checkpoint_flush_after
  
  allows to force the OS that pages written by the checkpoint should be
   flushed to disk after a configurable number of bytes.  Otherwise, these
   pages may be kept in the OS's page cache, inducing a stall when
  
   fsync
  
  is issued at the end of a checkpoint.  This setting will
   often help to reduce transaction latency, but it also can have an adverse
   effect on performance; particularly for workloads that are bigger than
  
   shared_buffers
  
  , but smaller than the OS's page cache.
 
  The number of WAL segment files in
  
   pg_wal
  
  directory depends on
  
   min_wal_size
  
  ,
  
   max_wal_size
  
  and
   the amount of WAL generated in previous checkpoint cycles. When old log
   segment files are no longer needed, they are removed or recycled (that is,
   renamed to become future segments in the numbered sequence). If, due to a
   short-term peak of log output rate,
  
   max_wal_size
  
  is
   exceeded, the unneeded segment files will be removed until the system
   gets back under this limit. Below that limit, the system recycles enough
   WAL files to cover the estimated need until the next checkpoint, and
   removes the rest. The estimate is based on a moving average of the number
   of WAL files used in previous checkpoint cycles. The moving average
   is increased immediately if the actual usage exceeds the estimate, so it
   accommodates peak usage rather than average usage to some extent.
  
   min_wal_size
  
  puts a minimum on the amount of WAL files
   recycled for future usage; that much WAL is always recycled for future use,
   even if the system is idle and the WAL usage estimate suggests that little
   WAL is needed.
 
  Independently of
  
   max_wal_size
  
  ,
  
   wal_keep_segments
  
  + 1 most recent WAL files are
   kept at all times. Also, if WAL archiving is used, old segments can not be
   removed or recycled until they are archived. If WAL archiving cannot keep up
   with the pace that WAL is generated, or if
  
   archive_command
  
  fails repeatedly, old WAL files will accumulate in
  
   pg_wal
  
  until the situation is resolved. A slow or failed standby server that
   uses a replication slot will have the same effect (see
  
   Section 26.2.6
  
  ).
 
  In archive recovery or standby mode, the server periodically performs
  
   restartpoints
  
  ,
  
  
  which are similar to checkpoints in normal operation: the server forces
   all its state to disk, updates the
  
   pg_control
  
  file to
   indicate that the already-processed WAL data need not be scanned again,
   and then recycles any old log segment files in the
  
   pg_wal
  
  directory.
   Restartpoints can't be performed more frequently than checkpoints in the
   master because restartpoints can only be performed at checkpoint records.
   A restartpoint is triggered when a checkpoint record is reached if at
   least
  
   checkpoint_timeout
  
  seconds have passed since the last
   restartpoint, or if WAL size is about to exceed
  
   max_wal_size
  
  . However, because of limitations on when a
   restartpoint can be performed,
  
   max_wal_size
  
  is often exceeded
   during recovery, by up to one checkpoint cycle's worth of WAL.
   (
  
   max_wal_size
  
  is never a hard limit anyway, so you should
   always leave plenty of headroom to avoid running out of disk space.)
 
  There are two commonly used internal
  
   WAL
  
  functions:
  
   XLogInsertRecord
  
  and
  
   XLogFlush
  
  .
  
   XLogInsertRecord
  
  is used to place a new record into
   the
  
   WAL
  
  buffers in shared memory. If there is no
   space for the new record,
  
   XLogInsertRecord
  
  will have
   to write (move to kernel cache) a few filled
  
   WAL
  
  buffers. This is undesirable because
  
   XLogInsertRecord
  
  is used on every database low level modification (for example, row
   insertion) at a time when an exclusive lock is held on affected
   data pages, so the operation needs to be as fast as possible.  What
   is worse, writing
  
   WAL
  
  buffers might also force the
   creation of a new log segment, which takes even more
   time. Normally,
  
   WAL
  
  buffers should be written
   and flushed by an
  
   XLogFlush
  
  request, which is
   made, for the most part, at transaction commit time to ensure that
   transaction records are flushed to permanent storage. On systems
   with high log output,
  
   XLogFlush
  
  requests might
   not occur often enough to prevent
  
   XLogInsertRecord
  
  from having to do writes.  On such systems
   one should increase the number of
  
   WAL
  
  buffers by
   modifying the
  
   wal_buffers
  
  parameter.  When
  
   full_page_writes
  
  is set and the system is very busy,
   setting
  
   wal_buffers
  
  higher will help smooth response times
   during the period immediately following each checkpoint.
 
  The
  
   commit_delay
  
  parameter defines for how many
   microseconds a group commit leader process will sleep after acquiring a
   lock within
  
   XLogFlush
  
  , while group commit
   followers queue up behind the leader.  This delay allows other server
   processes to add their commit records to the WAL buffers so that all of
   them will be flushed by the leader's eventual sync operation.  No sleep
   will occur if
  
   fsync
  
  is not enabled, or if fewer
   than
  
   commit_siblings
  
  other sessions are currently
   in active transactions; this avoids sleeping when it's unlikely that
   any other session will commit soon.  Note that on some platforms, the
   resolution of a sleep request is ten milliseconds, so that any nonzero
  
   commit_delay
  
  setting between 1 and 10000
   microseconds would have the same effect.  Note also that on some
   platforms, sleep operations may take slightly longer than requested by
   the parameter.
 
  Since the purpose of
  
   commit_delay
  
  is to allow the
   cost of each flush operation to be amortized across concurrently
   committing transactions (potentially at the expense of transaction
   latency), it is necessary to quantify that cost before the setting can
   be chosen intelligently.  The higher that cost is, the more effective
  
   commit_delay
  
  is expected to be in increasing
   transaction throughput, up to a point.  The
  
   
    
     pg_test_fsync
    
   
  
  program can be used to measure the average time
   in microseconds that a single WAL flush operation takes.  A value of
   half of the average time the program reports it takes to flush after a
   single 8kB write operation is often the most effective setting for
  
   commit_delay
  
  , so this value is recommended as the
   starting point to use when optimizing for a particular workload.  While
   tuning
  
   commit_delay
  
  is particularly useful when the
   WAL log is stored on high-latency rotating disks, benefits can be
   significant even on storage media with very fast sync times, such as
   solid-state drives or RAID arrays with a battery-backed write cache;
   but this should definitely be tested against a representative workload.
   Higher values of
  
   commit_siblings
  
  should be used in
   such cases, whereas smaller
  
   commit_siblings
  
  values
   are often helpful on higher latency media.  Note that it is quite
   possible that a setting of
  
   commit_delay
  
  that is too
   high can increase transaction latency by so much that total transaction
   throughput suffers.
 
  When
  
   commit_delay
  
  is set to zero (the default), it
   is still possible for a form of group commit to occur, but each group
   will consist only of sessions that reach the point where they need to
   flush their commit records during the window in which the previous
   flush operation (if any) is occurring.  At higher client counts a
  
   "
   
    gangway effect
   
   "
  
  tends to occur, so that the effects of group
   commit become significant even when
  
   commit_delay
  
  is
   zero, and thus explicitly setting
  
   commit_delay
  
  tends
   to help less.  Setting
  
   commit_delay
  
  can only help
   when (1) there are some concurrently committing transactions, and (2)
   throughput is limited to some degree by commit rate; but with high
   rotational latency this setting can be effective in increasing
   transaction throughput with as few as two clients (that is, a single
   committing client with one sibling transaction).
 
  The
  
   wal_sync_method
  
  parameter determines how
  
   PostgreSQL
  
  will ask the kernel to force
  
   WAL
  
  updates out to disk.
   All the options should be the same in terms of reliability, with
   the exception of
  
   fsync_writethrough
  
  , which can sometimes
   force a flush of the disk cache even when other options do not do so.
   However, it's quite platform-specific which one will be the fastest.
   You can test the speeds of different options using the
  
   
    
     pg_test_fsync
    
   
  
  program.
   Note that this parameter is irrelevant if
  
   fsync
  
  has been turned off.
 
  Enabling the
  
   wal_debug
  
  configuration parameter
   (provided that
  
   PostgreSQL
  
  has been
   compiled with support for it) will result in each
  
   XLogInsertRecord
  
  and
  
   XLogFlush
  
  
   WAL
  
  call being logged to the server log. This
   option might be replaced by a more general mechanism in the future.