F.4. auto_explain - log execution plans of slow queries
The
auto_explain
module provides a means for
logging execution plans of slow statements automatically, without
having to run
EXPLAIN
by hand. This is especially helpful for tracking down un-optimized queries
in large applications.
The module provides no SQL-accessible functions. To use it, simply load it into the server. You can load it into an individual session:
LOAD 'auto_explain';
(You must be superuser to do that.) More typical usage is to preload
it into some or all sessions by including
auto_explain
in
session_preload_libraries
or
shared_preload_libraries
in
postgresql.conf
. Then you can track unexpectedly slow queries
no matter when they happen. Of course there is a price in overhead for
that.
F.4.1. Configuration Parameters #
There are several configuration parameters that control the behavior of
auto_explain
. Note that the default behavior is
to do nothing, so you must set at least
auto_explain.log_min_duration
if you want any results.
-
auto_explain.log_min_duration
(integer
) # -
auto_explain.log_min_duration
is the minimum statement execution time, in milliseconds, that will cause the statement's plan to be logged. Setting this to0
logs all plans.-1
(the default) disables logging of plans. For example, if you set it to250ms
then all statements that run 250ms or longer will be logged. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.log_parameter_max_length
(integer
) # -
auto_explain.log_parameter_max_length
controls the logging of query parameter values. A value of-1
(the default) logs the parameter values in full.0
disables logging of parameter values. A value greater than zero truncates each parameter value to that many bytes. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.log_analyze
(boolean
) # -
auto_explain.log_analyze
causesEXPLAIN ANALYZE
output, rather than justEXPLAIN
output, to be printed when an execution plan is logged. This parameter is off by default. Only superusers can change this setting.Note
When this parameter is on, per-plan-node timing occurs for all statements executed, whether or not they run long enough to actually get logged. This can have an extremely negative impact on performance. Turning off
auto_explain.log_timing
ameliorates the performance cost, at the price of obtaining less information. -
auto_explain.log_buffers
(boolean
) # -
auto_explain.log_buffers
controls whether buffer usage statistics are printed when an execution plan is logged; it's equivalent to theBUFFERS
option ofEXPLAIN
. This parameter has no effect unlessauto_explain.log_analyze
is enabled. This parameter is off by default. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.log_wal
(boolean
) # -
auto_explain.log_wal
controls whether WAL usage statistics are printed when an execution plan is logged; it's equivalent to theWAL
option ofEXPLAIN
. This parameter has no effect unlessauto_explain.log_analyze
is enabled. This parameter is off by default. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.log_timing
(boolean
) # -
auto_explain.log_timing
controls whether per-node timing information is printed when an execution plan is logged; it's equivalent to theTIMING
option ofEXPLAIN
. The overhead of repeatedly reading the system clock can slow down queries significantly on some systems, so it may be useful to set this parameter to off when only actual row counts, and not exact times, are needed. This parameter has no effect unlessauto_explain.log_analyze
is enabled. This parameter is on by default. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.log_triggers
(boolean
) # -
auto_explain.log_triggers
causes trigger execution statistics to be included when an execution plan is logged. This parameter has no effect unlessauto_explain.log_analyze
is enabled. This parameter is off by default. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.log_verbose
(boolean
) # -
auto_explain.log_verbose
controls whether verbose details are printed when an execution plan is logged; it's equivalent to theVERBOSE
option ofEXPLAIN
. This parameter is off by default. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.log_settings
(boolean
) # -
auto_explain.log_settings
controls whether information about modified configuration options is printed when an execution plan is logged. Only options affecting query planning with value different from the built-in default value are included in the output. This parameter is off by default. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.log_format
(enum
) # -
auto_explain.log_format
selects theEXPLAIN
output format to be used. The allowed values aretext
,xml
,json
, andyaml
. The default is text. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.log_level
(enum
) # -
auto_explain.log_level
selects the log level at which auto_explain will log the query plan. Valid values areDEBUG5
,DEBUG4
,DEBUG3
,DEBUG2
,DEBUG1
,INFO
,NOTICE
,WARNING
, andLOG
. The default isLOG
. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.log_nested_statements
(boolean
) # -
auto_explain.log_nested_statements
causes nested statements (statements executed inside a function) to be considered for logging. When it is off, only top-level query plans are logged. This parameter is off by default. Only superusers can change this setting. -
auto_explain.sample_rate
(real
) # -
auto_explain.sample_rate
causes auto_explain to only explain a fraction of the statements in each session. The default is 1, meaning explain all the queries. In case of nested statements, either all will be explained or none. Only superusers can change this setting.
In ordinary usage, these parameters are set
in
postgresql.conf
, although superusers can alter them
on-the-fly within their own sessions.
Typical usage might be:
# postgresql.conf session_preload_libraries = 'auto_explain' auto_explain.log_min_duration = '3s'
F.4.2. Example #
postgres=# LOAD 'auto_explain'; postgres=# SET auto_explain.log_min_duration = 0; postgres=# SET auto_explain.log_analyze = true; postgres=# SELECT count(*) FROM pg_class, pg_index WHERE oid = indrelid AND indisunique;
This might produce log output such as:
LOG: duration: 3.651 ms plan: Query Text: SELECT count(*) FROM pg_class, pg_index WHERE oid = indrelid AND indisunique; Aggregate (cost=16.79..16.80 rows=1 width=0) (actual time=3.626..3.627 rows=1 loops=1) -> Hash Join (cost=4.17..16.55 rows=92 width=0) (actual time=3.349..3.594 rows=92 loops=1) Hash Cond: (pg_class.oid = pg_index.indrelid) -> Seq Scan on pg_class (cost=0.00..9.55 rows=255 width=4) (actual time=0.016..0.140 rows=255 loops=1) -> Hash (cost=3.02..3.02 rows=92 width=4) (actual time=3.238..3.238 rows=92 loops=1) Buckets: 1024 Batches: 1 Memory Usage: 4kB -> Seq Scan on pg_index (cost=0.00..3.02 rows=92 width=4) (actual time=0.008..3.187 rows=92 loops=1) Filter: indisunique
F.4.3. Author #
Takahiro Itagaki
<
itagaki.takahiro@oss.ntt.co.jp
>