pgstattuple
PostgreSQL 9.3.19 Documentation | ||||
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The pgstattuple module provides various functions to obtain tuple-level statistics.
F.29.1. Functions
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pgstattuple(text) returns record
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pgstattuple
returns a relation's physical length, percentage of "dead" tuples, and other info. This may help users to determine whether vacuum is necessary or not. The argument is the target relation's name (optionally schema-qualified). For example:test=> SELECT * FROM pgstattuple('pg_catalog.pg_proc'); -[ RECORD 1 ]------+------- table_len | 458752 tuple_count | 1470 tuple_len | 438896 tuple_percent | 95.67 dead_tuple_count | 11 dead_tuple_len | 3157 dead_tuple_percent | 0.69 free_space | 8932 free_percent | 1.95
The output columns are described in Table F-23 .
Table F-23.
pgstattuple
Output ColumnsColumn Type Description table_len bigint Physical relation length in bytes tuple_count bigint Number of live tuples tuple_len bigint Total length of live tuples in bytes tuple_percent float8 Percentage of live tuples dead_tuple_count bigint Number of dead tuples dead_tuple_len bigint Total length of dead tuples in bytes dead_tuple_percent float8 Percentage of dead tuples free_space bigint Total free space in bytes free_percent float8 Percentage of free space Note: The table_len will always be greater than the sum of the tuple_len , dead_tuple_len and free_space . The difference is accounted for by fixed page overhead, the per-page table of pointers to tuples, and padding to ensure that tuples are correctly aligned.
pgstattuple
acquires only a read lock on the relation. So the results do not reflect an instantaneous snapshot; concurrent updates will affect them.pgstattuple
judges a tuple is "dead" ifHeapTupleSatisfiesNow
returns false. -
pgstattuple(oid) returns record
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This is the same as
pgstattuple(text)
, except that the target relation is specified by OID. -
pgstatindex(text) returns record
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pgstatindex
returns a record showing information about a B-tree index. For example:test=> SELECT * FROM pgstatindex('pg_cast_oid_index'); -[ RECORD 1 ]------+------ version | 2 tree_level | 0 index_size | 16384 root_block_no | 1 internal_pages | 0 leaf_pages | 1 empty_pages | 0 deleted_pages | 0 avg_leaf_density | 54.27 leaf_fragmentation | 0
The output columns are:
Column Type Description version integer B-tree version number tree_level integer Tree level of the root page index_size bigint Total index size in bytes root_block_no bigint Location of root page (zero if none) internal_pages bigint Number of "internal" (upper-level) pages leaf_pages bigint Number of leaf pages empty_pages bigint Number of empty pages deleted_pages bigint Number of deleted pages avg_leaf_density float8 Average density of leaf pages leaf_fragmentation float8 Leaf page fragmentation The reported index_size will normally correspond to one more page than is accounted for by internal_pages + leaf_pages + empty_pages + deleted_pages , because it also includes the index's metapage.
As with
pgstattuple
, the results are accumulated page-by-page, and should not be expected to represent an instantaneous snapshot of the whole index. -
pgstatginindex(regclass) returns record
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pgstatginindex
returns a record showing information about a GIN index. For example:test=> SELECT * FROM pgstatginindex('test_gin_index'); -[ RECORD 1 ]--+-- version | 1 pending_pages | 0 pending_tuples | 0
The output columns are:
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pg_relpages(text) returns bigint
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pg_relpages
returns the number of pages in the relation.
F.29.2. Authors
Tatsuo Ishii and Satoshi Nagayasu