Return-Path: owner-postman Delivery-Date: Tue, 12 Apr 94 15:05:47 -0700 Return-Path: owner-postman Received: from localhost (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by nobozo.CS.Berkeley.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.3) with SMTP id KAA08346 for postgres-redist; Tue, 12 Apr 1994 10:56:17 -0700 Resent-From: POSTGRES mailing list Resent-Message-Id: <199404121756.KAA08346@nobozo.CS.Berkeley.EDU> Sender: owner-postman@postgres.Berkeley.EDU X-Return-Path: owner-postman Received: from faerie.CS.Berkeley.EDU (faerie.CS.Berkeley.EDU [128.32.149.14]) by nobozo.CS.Berkeley.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.3) with ESMTP id KAA08337 for ; Tue, 12 Apr 1994 10:56:16 -0700 Received: from localhost (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by faerie.CS.Berkeley.EDU (8.6.4/8.1B) with SMTP id KAA16577; Tue, 12 Apr 1994 10:56:14 -0700 Message-Id: <199404121756.KAA16577@faerie.CS.Berkeley.EDU> X-Authentication-Warning: faerie.CS.Berkeley.EDU: Host localhost didn't use HELO protocol From: aoki@postgres.Berkeley.EDU (Paul M. Aoki) To: Mark Victor Priester Cc: postgres@postgres.Berkeley.EDU Subject: Re: Another import question Reply-To: aoki@postgres.Berkeley.EDU (Paul M. Aoki) In-reply-to: Your message of Tue, 12 Apr 1994 10:12:36 -0400 (EDT) <9404121412.AA78322@student4.cl.msu.edu> Date: Tue, 12 Apr 94 10:56:14 -0700 X-Sender: aoki@postgres.Berkeley.EDU Resent-To: postgres-redist@postgres.Berkeley.EDU X-Mts: smtp Resent-Date: Tue, 12 Apr 94 10:56:17 -0700 Resent-XMts: smtp Mark Victor Priester writes: > 1. This works fine for 10 instances/lines even for 100 instances, > but when I set it to work on the whole file (~1.5M instances) > it chokes early on in the game. postgres "keeps" too much stuff lying around from command to command during a single transaction. you can think of this as a memory leak, but it does get cleaned up at end-of-transaction, so memory leak isn't quite the right way to describe it. so running large numbers of commands in a single transaction (on the order of 10000, depending on how much swap you have) causes you to run out of memory. so: you can load in smaller wads. since you are turning the values into ascii anyway (so that you can use "append") it seems like you could just create a file in the "copy" (tab-delimited) format and use "copy from". this is far more efficient than using append commands (no query parsing/optimization overhead, runs as a single xact). -- Paul M. Aoki | CS Div., Dept. of EECS, UCB | aoki@postgres.Berkeley.EDU | Berkeley, CA 94720 | ...!uunet!ucbvax!aoki