Question

When I began, I used pg_dump with the default plain format. I was unenlightened.

Research revealed to me time and file size improvements with pg_dump -Fc | gzip -9 -c > dumpfile.gz. I was enlightened.

When it came time to create the database anew,

# create tablespace dbname location '/SAN/dbname';
# create database dbname tablespace dbname;
# alter database dbname set temp_tablespaces = dbname;

% gunzip dumpfile.gz              # to evaluate restore time without a piped uncompression
% pg_restore -d dbname dumpfile   # into a new, empty database defined above

I felt unenlightened: the restore took 12 hours to create the database that's only a fraction of what it will become:

# select pg_size_pretty(pg_database_size('dbname'));
47 GB

Because there are predictions this database will be a few terabytes, I need to look at improving performance now.

Please, enlighten me.

Was it helpful?

Solution

First check that you are getting reasonable IO performance from your disk setup. Then check that you PostgreSQL installation is appropriately tuned. In particular shared_buffers should be set correctly, maintenance_work_mem should be increased during the restore, full_page_writes should be off during the restore, wal_buffers should be increased to 16MB during the restore, checkpoint_segments should be increased to something like 16 during the restore, you shouldn't have any unreasonable logging on (like logging every statement executed), auto_vacuum should be disabled during the restore.

If you are on 8.4 also experiment with parallel restore, the --jobs option for pg_restore.

OTHER TIPS

Two issues/ideas:

  1. By specifying -Fc, the pg_dump output is already compressed. The compression is not maximal, so you may find some space savings by using "gzip -9", but I would wager it's not enough to warrant the extra time (and I/O) used compressing and uncompressing the -Fc version of the backup.

  2. If you are using PostgreSQL 8.4.x you can potentially speed up the restore from a -Fc backup with the new pg_restore command-line option "-j n" where n=number of parallel connections to use for the restore. This will allow pg_restore to load more than one table's data or generate more than one index at the same time.

Improve pg dump&restore

PG_DUMP | always use format directory with -j option

time pg_dump -j 8 -Fd -f /tmp/newout.dir fsdcm_external

PG_RESTORE | always use tuning for postgres.conf with format directory With -j option

work_mem = 32MB
shared_buffers = 4GB
maintenance_work_mem = 2GB
full_page_writes = off
autovacuum = off
wal_buffers = -1

time pg_restore -j 8 --format=d -C -d postgres /tmp/newout.dir/`

For more info

https://github.com/YanarAssaf/PostgreSQL/wiki/Improve-pg-dump%7Crestore

I assume you need backup, not a major upgrade of database.

For backup of large databases you should setup continuous archiving instead of pg_dump.

  1. Set up WAL archiving.

  2. Make your base backups for example every day by using
    psql template1 -c "select pg_start_backup('`date +%F-%T``')" rsync -a --delete /var/lib/pgsql/data/ /var/backups/pgsql/base/ psql template1 -c "select pg_stop_backup()"`

A restore would be as simple as restoring database and WAL logs not older than pg_start_backup time from backup location and starting Postgres. And it will be much faster.

zcat dumpfile.gz | pg_restore -d db_name

Removes the full write of the uncompressed data to disk, which is currently your bottleneck.

As you may have guessed simply by the fact that compressing the backup results in faster performance, your backup is I/O bound. This should come as no surprise as backup is pretty much always going to be I/O bound. Compressing the data trades I/O load for CPU load, and since most CPUs are idle during monster data transfers, compression comes out as a net win.

So, to speed up backup/restore times, you need faster I/O. Beyond reorganizing the database to not be one huge single instance, that's pretty much all you can do.

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