vacuumdb

Garbage-collects and analyzes a database.

vacuumdb is typically run on system catalog tables. It has no effect when run on HAWQ user tables.

Synopsis

  1. vacuumdb [<connection_options>] [<vacuum_options>] [<database_name>]
  2. vacuumdb [-? | --help]
  3. vacuumdb --version

where:

  1. <connection_options> =
  2. [-h <host> | --host <host>]
  3. [-p <port> | --port <port>]
  4. [-U <username> | --username <username>]
  5. [-w | --no-password]
  6. [-W | --password]
  7. <vacuum_options> =
  8. [(-a | --all) | (-d <dbname> | --dbame <dbname>)]
  9. [-e | --echo]
  10. [-f | --full]
  11. [-F | --freeze]
  12. [-t <tablename> [( column [,...] )] | --table <tablename> [( column [,...] )] ]
  13. [(-v | --verbose) | (-q | --quiet)]
  14. [-z | --analyze]

Description

vacuumdb is a utility for cleaning a PostgreSQL database. vacuumdb will also generate internal statistics used by the PostgreSQL query optimizer.

vacuumdb is a wrapper around the SQL command VACUUM. There is no effective difference between vacuuming databases via this utility and via other methods for accessing the server.

Options

Identifies the name of the database to vacuum. If both this option and the -d option are not provided, the environment variable PGDATABASE is used. If that is not set, the user name specified for the connection is used.

-a, —all

Vacuums all databases.

-d, —dbname

The name of the database to vacuum. If this option is not specified, is not provided, and --all is not used, the database name is read from the environment variable PGDATABASE. If that is not set, the user name specified for the connection is used.

-e, —echo

Show the commands being sent to the server.

-f, —full

Selects a full vacuum, which may reclaim more space, but takes much longer and exclusively locks the table.

Warning: A VACUUM FULL is not recommended in HAWQ.

-F, —freeze

Freeze row transaction information.

-q, —quiet

Do not display a response.

-t, —table [()]

Clean or analyze this table only. Column names may be specified only in conjunction with the --analyze option. If you specify columns, you probably have to escape the parentheses from the shell.

-v, —verbose

Print detailed information during processing.

-z, —analyze

Collect statistics for use by the query planner.

-h, —host

Specifies the host name of the machine on which the HAWQ master database server is running. If not specified, reads from the environment variable PGHOST or defaults to localhost.

-p, —port

Specifies the TCP port on which the HAWQ master database server is listening for connections. If not specified, reads from the environment variable PGPORT or defaults to 5432.

-U, —username

The database role name to connect as. If not specified, reads from the environment variable PGUSER or defaults to the current system user name.

-w, —no-password

Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires password authentication and a password is not available by other means such as a .pgpass file, the connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a password.

-W, —password

Force a password prompt.

Notes

vacuumdb might need to connect several times to the master server, asking for a password each time. It is convenient to have a ~/.pgpass file for such cases.

Examples

To clean the database test:

  1. $ vacuumdb testdb

To clean and analyze a database named bigdb:

  1. $ vacuumdb --analyze bigdb

To clean a single table foo in a database named mydb, and analyze a single column bar of the table:

  1. $ vacuumdb --analyze --verbose --table 'foo(bar)' mydb

Note the quotes around the table and column names to escape the parentheses from the shell.